Mantle structure beneath the western edge of the Colorado Plateau
Abstract
Teleseismic traveltime data are inverted for mantle Vp and Vs variations beneath a 1400 km long line of broadband seismometers extending from eastern New Mexico to western Utah. The model spans 600 km beneath the moho with resolution of ~50 km. Inversions show a sharp, large-magnitude velocity contrast across the Colorado Plateau-Great Basin transition extending ~200 km below the crust. Also imaged is a fast anomaly 300 to 600 km beneath the NW portion of the array. Very slow velocities beneath the Great Basin imply partial melting and/or anomalously wet mantle. We propose that the sharp contrast in mantle velocities across the western edge of the Plateau corresponds to differential lithospheric modification, during and following Farallon subduction, across a boundary defining the western extent of unmodified Proterozoic mantle lithosphere. The deep fast anomaly corresponds to thickened Farallon plate or detached continental lithosphere at transition zone depths.
- Publication:
-
Geophysical Research Letters
- Pub Date:
- May 2008
- DOI:
- 10.1029/2008GL033391
- Bibcode:
- 2008GeoRL..3510303S
- Keywords:
-
- Seismology: Tomography (6982;
- 8180);
- Seismology: Mantle (1212;
- 1213;
- 8124);
- Seismology: Lithosphere (1236);
- Tectonophysics: Dynamics of lithosphere and mantle: general (1213);
- Tectonophysics: Continental tectonics: general (0905)