Subduction‐induced strain in the upper mantle east of the Mendocino triple junction, California
2000
We observe splitting of teleseismic shear waves at five stations of the Berkeley Digital Seismic Network located east of the Mendocino triple junction in northeastern California that is dependent on the arrival direction of the seismic phases. The observed variations with back azimuth cannot be explained with laterally varying anisotropy with a horizontal symmetry axis and are attributed to the presence of fabric with an inclined symmetry axis. We assume that the anisotropy is caused by the preferred alignment of olivine crystals. A grid search over possible orientations of the olivine a axes reveals that south of the Mendocino triple junction they dip to the east, whereas north of the triple junction they dip to the northeast. On the basis of a comparison of the ray paths of our data to the spatial distribution of fast and slow P wave velocity anomalies in the upper mantle, we conclude that the anisotropy is located within seismically slow regions and that the directions are controlled by the geometry of a steeply dipping fast P wave velocity anomaly. Assuming that the fast P velocity anomaly represents subducted slab material, we conclude that the fabric beneath the stations north of the triple junction is most likely caused by the differential motion between this rigid, strong down going plate and the surrounding mantle. South of the triple junction the fabric may have developed while subduction of the Farallon plate was still ongoing in this region (prior to 6 Ma). However, we prefer to attribute the observations to more recent asthenospheric flow associated with the opening of a slabless window beneath the North American lithosphere. The flow is modulated by the presence of rigid lithosphere to the north and east.
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