DISPERSION OF P-WAVES IN SUBDUCTED LITHOSPHERE - EVIDENCE FOR AN ECLOGITE LAYER

被引:53
作者
GUBBINS, D [1 ]
SNIEDER, R [1 ]
机构
[1] STATE UNIV UTRECHT, DEPT THEORET GEOPHYS, 3508 TA UTRECHT, NETHERLANDS
来源
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-SOLID EARTH AND PLANETS | 1991年 / 96卷 / B4期
关键词
D O I
10.1029/90JB02741
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
Cold, subducted lithosphere has relatively fast seismic velocity which leads to early arrivals for some event-station paths. The effect is very large for events in the Tonga-Kermadec deep seismic zone recorded at certain New Zealand stations. These particular arrivals are very high-frequency (3 Hz or greater) and sometimes resemble two distinct phases, the later arrival appearing at about the time predicted by Jeffreys-Bullen tables. Data from the digital station SNZO in Wellington confirm the travel time results of the analog stations and furthermore show frequencies above 5 Hz, much higher than can be seen on analog records, and up to 4% dispersion in the range 1-8 Hz. Energy in the second phase (which is often absent at SNZO) is mainly 1-2 Hz. The digital data support the idea, proposed earlier, that the effect is caused by propagation through a thin slab which passes only short-wavelength waves. The essential features of the wave propagation are modeled by acoustic waves in a one-dimensional high-velocity slab; the waveforms produced by the model are discussed in terms of the leaky modes of the system and calculated by a reflectivity method. A very thin (< 15 km) uniform slab provides the required dispersion, but the waves are heavily attenuated and would never be observed at teleseismic distances; a thicker slab allows the energy through but does not give enough dispersion. Altering the variation of velocity across the slab provides the required dispersion if a thick high-velocity layer, with wave speed increasing gradually with height, is overlain by a thin lid of even higher velocity. For the models considered the lid thickness must lie in the range 6-15 km and be continuous from a depth of about 50 km to the bottom of the earthquake zone. The thick layer could arise from the thermal anomaly in the subducted lithosphere; the thin lid may be the gabbroic part of the subducted crust that has transformed to eclogite.
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页码:6321 / 6333
页数:13
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