Title | Limited mantle hydration by bending faults at the Middle America Trench |
Publication Type | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 2020 |
Authors | Miller, NC, Lizarralde, D, Collins, JA, W. Holbrook, S, Van Avendonk, H |
Journal | Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth |
Type of Article | Journal Article |
Abstract | Seismic anisotropy measurements show that upper mantle hydration at the Middle America Trench (MAT) is limited to serpentinization and/or water in fault zones, rather than distributed uniformly. Subduction of hydrated oceanic lithosphere recycles water back into the deep mantle, drives arc volcanism, and affects seismicity at subduction zones. Constraining the extent of upper mantle hydration is an important part of understanding many fundamental processes on Earth. Substantially reduced seismic velocities in tomography suggest that outer rise plate‐bending faults provide a pathway for seawater to rehydrate the slab mantle just prior to subduction. Estimates of outer‐rise hydration based on tomograms vary significantly, with some large enough to imply that, globally, subduction has consumed more than two oceans worth of water during the Phanerozoic. We found that, while the mean upper mantle wavespeed is reduced at the MAT outer rise, the amplitude and orientation of inherited anisotropy are preserved at depths >1 km below the Moho. At shallower depths, relict anisotropy is replaced by slowing in the fault‐normal direction. These observations are incompatible with pervasive hydration but consistent with models of wave propagation through serpentinized fault zones that thin to <100‐m in width at depths >1 km below Moho. Confining hydration to fault zones reduces water storage estimates for the MAT upper mantle from ∼3.5 wt% to <0.9 wt% H20. Since the intermediate thermal structure in the ∼24 Myr‐old MAT slab favors serpentinization, limited hydration suggests that fault mechanics are the limiting factor, not temperatures. Subducting mantle may be similarly dry globally. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved. Upper mantle anisotropy indicates that hydration by fluid flow along bending faults is limited to fault zones that thin with depthConfining hydration to fault zones reduces estimates of water storage by an order of magnitudeA dry, intermediate‐age slab mantle suggests that hydration may be globally limited by fault dynamics, rather than temperature Upper mantle anisotropy indicates that hydration by fluid flow along bending faults is limited to fault zones that thin with depth Confining hydration to fault zones reduces estimates of water storage by an order of magnitude A dry, intermediate‐age slab mantle suggests that hydration may be globally limited by fault dynamics, rather than temperature. |
URL | https://app.dimensions.ai/details/publication/pub.1133689698 |
DOI | 10.1029/2020jb020982 |