Three-dimensional shear wave velocity structure in the Atlantic upper mantle

Oceanic lithosphere constitutes the upper boundary layer of the Earth’s convecting mantle. Its structure and evolution provide a vital window on the dynamics of the mantle and important clues to how the motions of Earth’s surface plates are coupled to convection in the mantle below. The three-dimens...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: James, Esther Kezia
Language:en_US
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2144/17055
id ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-17055
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-170552019-01-08T15:38:46Z Three-dimensional shear wave velocity structure in the Atlantic upper mantle James, Esther Kezia Geophysics Atlantic Ocean Upper mantle Hotspot volcanism Oceanic lithosphere Shear-wave velocities Three-dimensional model Oceanic lithosphere constitutes the upper boundary layer of the Earth’s convecting mantle. Its structure and evolution provide a vital window on the dynamics of the mantle and important clues to how the motions of Earth’s surface plates are coupled to convection in the mantle below. The three-dimensional shear-velocity structure of the upper mantle beneath the Atlantic Ocean is investigated to gain insight into processes that drive formation of oceanic lithosphere. Travel times are measured for approximately 10,000 fundamental-mode Rayleigh waves, in the period range 30-130 seconds, traversing the Atlantic basin. Paths with >30% of their length through continental upper mantle are excluded to maximize sensitivity to the oceanic upper mantle. The lateral distribution of Rayleigh wave phase velocity in the Atlantic upper mantle is explored with two approaches. One, phase velocity is allowed to vary only as a function of seafloor age. Two, a general two-dimensional parameterization is utilized in order to capture perturbations to age-dependent structure. Phase velocity shows a strong dependence on seafloor age, and removing age-dependent velocity from the 2-D maps highlights areas of anomalously low velocity, almost all of which are proximal to locations of hotspot volcanism. Depth-dependent variations in vertically-polarized shear velocity (Vsv) are determined with two sets of 3-D models: a layered model that requires constant VSV in each depth layer, and a splined model that allows VSV to vary continuously with depth. At shallow depths (~75 km) the seismic structure shows the expected dependence on seafloor age. At greater depths (~200 km) high-velocity lithosphere is found only beneath the oldest seafloor; velocity variations beneath younger seafloor may result from temperature or compositional variations within the asthenosphere. The age-dependent phase velocities are used to constrain temperature in the mantle and show that, in contrast to previous results for the Pacific, phase velocities for the Atlantic are not consistent with a half-space cooling model but are best explained by a plate-cooling model with thickness of 75 km and mantle temperature of 1400oC. Comparison with data such as basalt chemistry and seafloor elevation helps to separate thermal and compositional effects on shear velocity. 2016-07-14T17:10:43Z 2016-07-14T17:10:43Z 2016 2016-06-21T19:35:30Z Thesis/Dissertation https://hdl.handle.net/2144/17055 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Geophysics
Atlantic Ocean
Upper mantle
Hotspot volcanism
Oceanic lithosphere
Shear-wave velocities
Three-dimensional model
spellingShingle Geophysics
Atlantic Ocean
Upper mantle
Hotspot volcanism
Oceanic lithosphere
Shear-wave velocities
Three-dimensional model
James, Esther Kezia
Three-dimensional shear wave velocity structure in the Atlantic upper mantle
description Oceanic lithosphere constitutes the upper boundary layer of the Earth’s convecting mantle. Its structure and evolution provide a vital window on the dynamics of the mantle and important clues to how the motions of Earth’s surface plates are coupled to convection in the mantle below. The three-dimensional shear-velocity structure of the upper mantle beneath the Atlantic Ocean is investigated to gain insight into processes that drive formation of oceanic lithosphere. Travel times are measured for approximately 10,000 fundamental-mode Rayleigh waves, in the period range 30-130 seconds, traversing the Atlantic basin. Paths with >30% of their length through continental upper mantle are excluded to maximize sensitivity to the oceanic upper mantle. The lateral distribution of Rayleigh wave phase velocity in the Atlantic upper mantle is explored with two approaches. One, phase velocity is allowed to vary only as a function of seafloor age. Two, a general two-dimensional parameterization is utilized in order to capture perturbations to age-dependent structure. Phase velocity shows a strong dependence on seafloor age, and removing age-dependent velocity from the 2-D maps highlights areas of anomalously low velocity, almost all of which are proximal to locations of hotspot volcanism. Depth-dependent variations in vertically-polarized shear velocity (Vsv) are determined with two sets of 3-D models: a layered model that requires constant VSV in each depth layer, and a splined model that allows VSV to vary continuously with depth. At shallow depths (~75 km) the seismic structure shows the expected dependence on seafloor age. At greater depths (~200 km) high-velocity lithosphere is found only beneath the oldest seafloor; velocity variations beneath younger seafloor may result from temperature or compositional variations within the asthenosphere. The age-dependent phase velocities are used to constrain temperature in the mantle and show that, in contrast to previous results for the Pacific, phase velocities for the Atlantic are not consistent with a half-space cooling model but are best explained by a plate-cooling model with thickness of 75 km and mantle temperature of 1400oC. Comparison with data such as basalt chemistry and seafloor elevation helps to separate thermal and compositional effects on shear velocity.
author James, Esther Kezia
author_facet James, Esther Kezia
author_sort James, Esther Kezia
title Three-dimensional shear wave velocity structure in the Atlantic upper mantle
title_short Three-dimensional shear wave velocity structure in the Atlantic upper mantle
title_full Three-dimensional shear wave velocity structure in the Atlantic upper mantle
title_fullStr Three-dimensional shear wave velocity structure in the Atlantic upper mantle
title_full_unstemmed Three-dimensional shear wave velocity structure in the Atlantic upper mantle
title_sort three-dimensional shear wave velocity structure in the atlantic upper mantle
publishDate 2016
url https://hdl.handle.net/2144/17055
work_keys_str_mv AT jamesestherkezia threedimensionalshearwavevelocitystructureintheatlanticuppermantle
_version_ 1718811532466323456