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New insight into the crust and upper mantle structure under Alaska
Authors:Cheng Qi   Dapeng Zhao   Yong Chen  Natalia A. Ruppert
Affiliation:

aDepartment of Geophysics, Tohoku University, Sendai 980-8578, Japan

bInstitute of Geology and Geophysics, Chinese Academy of Science, Beijing 100029, China

cInstitute of Earthquake Science, China Earthquake Administration, Beijing, China

dGeophysical Institute, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, USA

Abstract:To better understand the seismic structure of the subducting Pacific plate under Alaska, we determined the three-dimensional P-wave velocity structure to a depth of approximately 200 km beneath Alaska using 438,146 P-wave arrival times from 10,900 earthquakes. In this study an irregular grid parameterization was adopted to express the velocity structure under Alaska. The number of grid nodes increases from north to south in the study area so that the spacing between grid nodes is approximately the same in the longitude direction. Our results suggest that the subducting Pacific slab under Alaska can be divided into three different parts based on its geometry and velocity structure. The western part has features similar to those in other subduction zones. In the central part a thick low-velocity zone is imaged at the top of the subducting Pacific slab beneath north of the Kenai Peninsula, which is believed to be most likely the oceanic crust plus an overlying serpentinized zone and the coupled Yakutat terrane subducted with the Pacific slab. In the eastern part, significant high-velocity anomalies are visible to 60–90 km depth, suggesting that the Pacific slab has only subducted down to that depth.
Keywords:Seismic tomography   Subduction zone   Alaska   Yakutat terrane   Arc volcanism
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