Seismic evidence for widespread serpentinized forearc upper mantle along the Cascadia margin
Seismic evidence for widespread serpentinized forearc upper mantle along the Cascadia margin
Geology (Boulder) (March 2003) 31 (3): 267-270
- basins
- body waves
- British Columbia
- Canada
- Cascadia subduction zone
- continental margin
- dehydration
- East Pacific
- elastic waves
- fore-arc basins
- geophysical methods
- geophysical profiles
- geophysical surveys
- Georgia Basin
- hydration
- Juan de Fuca Strait
- mantle
- mantle wedges
- Mendocino fracture zone
- metaigneous rocks
- metamorphic rocks
- metasomatic rocks
- metasomatism
- Mohorovicic discontinuity
- North America
- North Pacific
- Northeast Pacific
- Olympic Peninsula
- Oregon
- Pacific Ocean
- Puget Sound
- reflection methods
- refraction methods
- S-waves
- seismic methods
- seismic profiles
- seismic waves
- serpentinite
- serpentinization
- shear
- slabs
- subduction zones
- surveys
- teleseismic signals
- tomography
- United States
- upper mantle
- Vancouver Island
- velocity structure
- Washington
- Western Canada
Petrologic models suggest that dehydration and metamorphism of subducting slabs release water that serpentinizes the overlying forearc mantle. To test these models, we use the results of controlled-source seismic surveys and earthquake tomography to map the upper mantle along the Cascadia margin forearc. We find anomalously low upper-mantle velocities and/or weak wide-angle reflections from the top of the upper mantle in a narrow region along the margin, compatible with recent teleseismic studies and indicative of a serpentinized upper mantle. The existence of a hydrated forearc upper-mantle wedge in Cascadia has important geological and geophysical implications. For example, shearing within the upper mantle, inferred from seismic reflectivity and consistent with its serpentinite rheology, may occur during aseismic slow slip events on the megathrust. In addition, progressive dehydration of the hydrated mantle wedge south of the Mendocino triple junction may enhance the effects of a slab gap during the evolution of the California margin.