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S-Pconversion from the transition zone beneath Tonga and the nature of the 670 km discontinuity

Authors :
Charles W. Wicks
Mark A. Richards
Source :
Geophysical Journal International. 101:1-35
Publication Year :
1990
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 1990.

Abstract

SUMMARY Using more than 300 recordings of deep Tonga earthquakes from the Warramunga Seismic Array (central Australia), we have searched for short-period S-P conversions from the 670 km discontinuity arriving in the P-wave codas. The array seismograms were stacked and plotted in sections to optimize observation of S670P yielding the following results: For the northern part of Tonga (17.3°–18.4°S), S670P-phases are observed with apparent conversion depths between about 660 and 680 km. For the central part (20.2°–22.3°S), S670P is not clearly observed. For the southern part (23.1°–25.7°S), S670P is observed for conversion depths between about 660 and 700 km. Intermittent occurrence of S-P conversion may result from different characteristic source radiation patterns among the three sections. Overall uncertainties in conversion depths (resulting from unmodelled lateral velocity variations and hypocentral location errors) are perhaps a few tens of kilometres. The S-P rays must travel either within or very close to the subducted slab because of the source/receiver/slab-dip geometry, so we conclude that large (>50 km) deformations of the 670 km discontinuity do not occur beneath Tonga. Our observations appear to be inconsistent with a chemical discontinuity at 670 km, but are easily explained if the 670 km discontinuity is a strongly pressure-dependent and, perhaps, moderately endothermic phase change in both the slab and surrounding mantle.

Details

ISSN :
1365246X and 0956540X
Volume :
101
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Geophysical Journal International
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........722f54bd9ec6f86ffea525918ead9e50
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-246x.1990.tb00755.x