Discovery of flat seismic reflections in the mantle beneath the young Juan de Fuca Plate.
Yanfang QinSatish C SinghIngo GrevemeyerMilena MarjanovićW Roger BuckPublished in: Nature communications (2020)
Crustal properties of young oceanic lithosphere have been examined extensively, but the nature of the mantle lithosphere underneath remains elusive. Using a novel wide-angle seismic imaging technique, here we show the presence of two sub-horizontal reflections at ∼11 and ∼14.5 km below the seafloor over the 0.51-2.67 Ma old Juan de Fuca Plate. We find that the observed reflectors originate from 300-600-m-thick layers, with an ∼7-8% drop in P-wave velocity. They could be explained either by the presence of partially molten sills or frozen gabbroic sills. If partially molten, the shallower sill would define the base of a thin lithosphere with the constant thickness (11 km), requiring the presence of a mantle thermal anomaly extending up to 2.67 Ma. In contrast, if these reflections were frozen melt sills, they would imply the presence of thick young oceanic lithosphere (20-25 km), and extremely heterogeneous upper mantle.