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Possible emplacement of crustal rocks into the forearc mantle of the Cascadia Subduction Zone

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Field Value
Title Possible emplacement of crustal rocks into the forearc mantle of the Cascadia Subduction Zone
Names Calvert, Andrew J. (creator)
Fisher, Michael A. (creator)
Ramachandran, Kumar (creator)
Tréhu, Anne Martine (creator)
Date Issued 2003-12-05 (iso8601)
Note Copyrighted by American Geophysical Union.
Abstract Seismic reflection profiles shot across the Cascadia
forearc show that a 5–15 km thick band of reflections,
previously interpreted as a lower crustal shear zone above
the subducting Juan de Fuca plate, extends into the upper
mantle of the North American plate, reaching depths of at
least 50 km. In the extreme western corner of the mantle
wedge, these reflectors occur in rocks with P wave velocities
of 6750–7000 ms⁻¹. Elsewhere, the forearc mantle, which is
probably partially serpentinized, exhibits velocities of
approximately 7500 ms⁻¹. The rocks with velocities of
6750–7000 ms⁻¹ are anomalous with respect to the
surrounding mantle, and may represent either: (1) locally
high mantle serpentinization, (2) oceanic crust trapped by
backstepping of the subduction zone, or (3) rocks from the
lower continental crust that have been transported into the
uppermost mantle by subduction erosion. The association of
subparallel seismic reflectors with these anomalously low
velocities favours the tectonic emplacement of crustal
rocks.
Genre Article
Identifier Calvert, A. J., M. A. Fisher, K. Ramachandran, and A. M. Tre´hu, Possible emplacement of crustal rocks into the forearc mantle of the Cascadia Subduction Zone, Geophys. Res. Lett., 30(23), 2196, 2003.

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