R. M. Russo
University of Florida
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Featured researches published by R. M. Russo.
Gsa Today | 2010
R. M. Russo; John C. VanDecar; Diana Comte; Victor Mocanu; Alejandro Gallego; Ruth E. Murdie
We deployed 39 broadband seismometers in southern Chile from Dec. 2004 to Feb. 2007 to determine lithosphere and upper mantle structure in the vicinity of the subducting Chile Ridge. Body-wave travel-time tomography clearly shows the existence of a long-hypothesized slab window, a gap between the subducted Nazca and Antarctic lithospheres. P-wave velocities in the slab gap are distinctly slow relative to surrounding asthenospheric mantle. Thus, the gap between slabs visible in the imaging appears to be filled by unusually warm asthenosphere, consistent with subduction of the Chile Ridge. Shear wave splitting in the Chile Ridge subduction region is very strong (mean delay time ~3 s) and highly variable. North of the slab windows, splitting fast directions are mostly trench parallel, but, in the region of the slab gap, splitting fast trends appear to fan from NW-SE trends in the north, through ENE-WSW trends toward the middle of the slab window, to NE-SW trends south of the slab window. We interpret these results as indicating flow of asthenospheric upper mantle into the slab window.
Geology | 2010
R. M. Russo; Alejandro Gallego; Diana Comte; Victor Mocanu; Ruth E. Murdie; John C. VanDecar
The actively spreading Chile Ridge has been subducting beneath Patagonian Chile since the Middle Miocene. After subduction, continued separation of the faster Nazca plate from the slow Antarctic plate has opened up a gap—a slab window—between the subducted oceanic lithospheres beneath South America. We examined the form of the asthenospheric mantle flow in the vicinity of this slab window using S waves from six isolated, unusual 2007 earthquakes that occurred in the generally low-seismicity region just north of the ridge subduction region. The S waves from these earthquakes were recorded at distant seismic stations, but were split into fast and slow orthogonally polarized waves at upper mantle depths during their passage through the slab window and environs. We isolated the directions of fast split shear waves near the slab window by correcting for upper mantle seismic anisotropy at the distant stations. The results show that the generally trench-parallel upper mantle flow beneath the Nazca plate rotates to an ENE trend in the neighborhood of the slab gap, consistent with upper mantle flow from west to east through the slab window.
Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2005
R. M. Russo; Victor Mocanu; Mircea Radulian; Mihaela Popa; K.-P. Bonjer
Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2009
R. M. Russo; V.I. Mocanu
Journal of Seismology | 2010
Cindy Mora; Diana Comte; R. M. Russo; Alejandro Gallego; Victor Mocanu
Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2013
Alejandro Gallego; R. M. Russo; Diana Comte; Victor Mocanu; R. E. Murdie; John C. VanDecar
Geophysical Journal International | 2011
R. M. Russo; Alejandro Gallego; Diana Comte; Victor Mocanu; Ruth E. Murdie; Cindy Mora; John C. VanDecar
Archive | 2007
D. Comte; Alejandro Gallego; R. M. Russo; Victor Mocanu; Ruth E. Murdie; John C. VanDecar
Archive | 2006
Alejandro Gallego; R. M. Russo; Diana Comte; Victor Mocanu; Ruth E. Murdie
Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union | 2000
Martin F. J. Flower; Ma Zongjin; Victor Mocanu; R. M. Russo; Nguyen Trong Yem; Cung Thuong Chi; Nguyen Quoc Cuong; Deng Jinfu; Yildirim Dilek; Corneliu Dinu; Liu Futian; Mian Liu; Nguyen Hoang; Paul T. Robinson; Mo Xuanxei; Ray Punongbayan; Friedmann Wenzel; Graciano Yumul; Elisabeth Widom