Delamination of southern Puna lithosphere revealed by body wave attenuation tomography
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Liang, Xiaofeng
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Delamination of southern Puna lithosphere revealed by body wave attenuation tomography
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Abstract
The southern Puna Plateau has been proposed to result from a major Pliocene delamination
event that has previously been inferred from geochemical, geological, and some preliminary geophysical data.
Seventy-five seismic stations were deployed across the southern Puna Plateau in 2007–2009 by scientists fromthe
U.S., Germany, Chile, and Argentina to test the delamination model for the region. The Puna passive seismic
stations were located between 25 and 28°S. Using the seismic waveform data collected from the PUNA
experiment,we employ attenuation tomography methods to resolve both compressional and shear quality factors
(Qp and Qs, respectively) in the crust and uppermost mantle. The images clearly show a high-Q Nazca slab
subducting eastward beneath the Puna plateau and another high-Q block with a westward dip beneath the
Eastern Cordillera. We suggest that the latter is a piece of delaminated South American lithosphere. A significant
low-Q zone lies between the Nazca slab and the South American lithosphere and extends southward from the
northernmargin of the seismic array at 25°S before vanishing around 27.5°S. This low-Q zone extends farther west
in the crust and uppermost mantle at the southern end of the seismic array. The low-Q zone reaches ~100 km
depth beneath the northern part of the array but only ~50 km depth in the south. Lateral variations of the low-Q
zone reflect the possible mechanism conversion between mantle upwelling related to delamination and
dehydration. The depth of the Nazca slab as defined by Q images decreases from north to south beneath the
plateau, which is consistentwith the steep-flat transition of the angle of the subducting slab as defined by previous
earthquake studies.
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Artículo de publicación ISI
Patrocinador
This research is
supported by the National Natural
Science Foundation of China under
grant 41340040, 91128210, the
Continental Dynamics, National Science
Foundation (USA) under grant EAR-
0538245, and by the Deutsche
Forschungsgemeinschaft KI 314/27-1.
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Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth Volume 119, Issue 1, pages 549–566, January 2014
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