Subduction-zone magnetic anomalies and implications for hydrated forearc mantle
Subduction-zone magnetic anomalies and implications for hydrated forearc mantle
Geology (Boulder) (June 2005) 33 (6): 445-448
- airborne methods
- basins
- Cascadia subduction zone
- continental margin
- earthquakes
- East Pacific
- fore-arc basins
- geophysical methods
- geophysical surveys
- gravity anomalies
- gravity methods
- hydration
- magnetic anomalies
- magnetic methods
- mantle
- metasomatism
- North Pacific
- Northeast Pacific
- Oregon
- Pacific Ocean
- plate convergence
- serpentinization
- subduction zones
- surveys
- thermal regime
- United States
- Washington
Continental mantle in subduction zones is hydrated by release of water from the underlying oceanic plate. Magnetite is a significant byproduct of mantle hydration, and forearc mantle, cooled by subduction, should contribute to long-wavelength magnetic anomalies above subduction zones. We test this hypothesis with a quantitative model of the Cascadia convergent margin, based on gravity and aeromagnetic anomalies and constrained by seismic velocities, and find that hydrated mantle explains an important disparity in potential-field anomalies of Cascadia. A comparison with aeromagnetic data, thermal models, and earthquakes of Cascadia, Japan, and southern Alaska suggests that magnetic mantle may be common in forearc settings and thus magnetic anomalies may be useful in mapping hydrated mantle in convergent margins worldwide.