Trench-parallel fast axes of seismic anisotropy due to fluid-filled cracks insubducting slabs

Subducting slabs experience deformation and metamorphism as they descend into the upper mantle. Thepresence of hydrous minerals gained through the interaction with sea water at mid-ocean ridges, transformfaults or the outer rise ensures that dehydration reactions will be important at deeper levels....

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Main Authors: Healy, David, Reddy, Steven, Timms, Nicholas Eric, Gray, Erin, Brovarone, A.V.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Elsevier Science BV 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/35124
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author Healy, David
Reddy, Steven
Timms, Nicholas Eric
Gray, Erin
Brovarone, A.V.
author_facet Healy, David
Reddy, Steven
Timms, Nicholas Eric
Gray, Erin
Brovarone, A.V.
author_sort Healy, David
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Subducting slabs experience deformation and metamorphism as they descend into the upper mantle. Thepresence of hydrous minerals gained through the interaction with sea water at mid-ocean ridges, transformfaults or the outer rise ensures that dehydration reactions will be important at deeper levels. We describefield evidence for brittle hydrofracture in previously subducted rocks from the Western Alps, with a freeaqueous fluid phase produced by dehydration reactions in the host blueschists and serpentinites. Theprotracted history of dehydration reactions, ductile deformation, fluid flow and brittle vein formation inthese rocks implies that fluid-filled cracks are continuously produced within the dehydration window. Thepresence of abundant fluid-filled cracks at these depths has important implications for the seismic anisotropygenerated within slabs, which has largely been overlooked. The effects of fluid-filled crack damage on theelastic properties of a blueschist and serpentinite within the slab at depth have been modelled, and show asignificant rotation of the fast axes of P and S1 waves to be trench-parallel for receiving stations in the forearc,above the dehydrating portion of the slab. This model provides an alternative explanation for suprasubductionzone seismic anisotropy that does not require high-stress, high-water conditions, or trenchparallelflow in the supra-subduction zone mantle wedge.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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publishDate 2009
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-351242017-09-13T16:08:35Z Trench-parallel fast axes of seismic anisotropy due to fluid-filled cracks insubducting slabs Healy, David Reddy, Steven Timms, Nicholas Eric Gray, Erin Brovarone, A.V. serpentinite shear wave splitting high pressure metamorphism dehydration vein eclogite Subducting slabs experience deformation and metamorphism as they descend into the upper mantle. Thepresence of hydrous minerals gained through the interaction with sea water at mid-ocean ridges, transformfaults or the outer rise ensures that dehydration reactions will be important at deeper levels. We describefield evidence for brittle hydrofracture in previously subducted rocks from the Western Alps, with a freeaqueous fluid phase produced by dehydration reactions in the host blueschists and serpentinites. Theprotracted history of dehydration reactions, ductile deformation, fluid flow and brittle vein formation inthese rocks implies that fluid-filled cracks are continuously produced within the dehydration window. Thepresence of abundant fluid-filled cracks at these depths has important implications for the seismic anisotropygenerated within slabs, which has largely been overlooked. The effects of fluid-filled crack damage on theelastic properties of a blueschist and serpentinite within the slab at depth have been modelled, and show asignificant rotation of the fast axes of P and S1 waves to be trench-parallel for receiving stations in the forearc,above the dehydrating portion of the slab. This model provides an alternative explanation for suprasubductionzone seismic anisotropy that does not require high-stress, high-water conditions, or trenchparallelflow in the supra-subduction zone mantle wedge. 2009 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/35124 10.1016/j.epsl.2009.03.037 Elsevier Science BV fulltext
spellingShingle serpentinite
shear wave splitting
high pressure metamorphism
dehydration
vein
eclogite
Healy, David
Reddy, Steven
Timms, Nicholas Eric
Gray, Erin
Brovarone, A.V.
Trench-parallel fast axes of seismic anisotropy due to fluid-filled cracks insubducting slabs
title Trench-parallel fast axes of seismic anisotropy due to fluid-filled cracks insubducting slabs
title_full Trench-parallel fast axes of seismic anisotropy due to fluid-filled cracks insubducting slabs
title_fullStr Trench-parallel fast axes of seismic anisotropy due to fluid-filled cracks insubducting slabs
title_full_unstemmed Trench-parallel fast axes of seismic anisotropy due to fluid-filled cracks insubducting slabs
title_short Trench-parallel fast axes of seismic anisotropy due to fluid-filled cracks insubducting slabs
title_sort trench-parallel fast axes of seismic anisotropy due to fluid-filled cracks insubducting slabs
topic serpentinite
shear wave splitting
high pressure metamorphism
dehydration
vein
eclogite
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/35124