4.3 Article

Seismic anisotropy of the Pacific slab and mantle wedge beneath the Japanese islands

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AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2009JB006290

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The mantle beneath the Japanese islands is complex because of subduction of the Pacific and Philippine Sea plates and the deformation associated with it. Detection of seismic anisotropy should be useful for understanding the processes occurring in such mantle. Here we resolve seismic anisotropy of the mantle wedge from that of the underlying subducted Pacific slab using a large number of measurements of shear wave splitting for a family of core-reflected shear phases: ScS, sScS, ScS2, and sScS2. The anisotropy of the mantle wedge changes sharply across the volcanic front. On the Pacific side of the volcanic front a vertically propagating shear wave is polarized with the fast direction approximately parallel to the trench, whereas on the back-arc side it is polarized with the fast direction approximately parallel to the plate convergence direction. The Pacific slab is uniformly anisotropic with the NNW fast direction, consistent with the paleospreading direction of the northwestern Pacific seafloor. The preferential alignment of anisotropic crystals frozen in the plate at the time of its formation appears to be preserved down to depths beyond 400 km within the slab.

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