Publication | Open Access
Changes in Seismic Anisotropy Shed Light on the Nature of the Gutenberg Discontinuity
125
Citations
52
References
2014
Year
Anisotropic Tomography ModelEngineeringMantle DynamicSeismic WaveSeismic Body WavesEarth ScienceGeophysicsPlate TectonicsEarthquake SourceSeismic AnalysisGeodesyEarthquake EngineeringSeismic CyclePhysicsGeographyGeologyLithosphereGutenberg DiscontinuityTectonicsStructural GeologySeismologyGeomechanicsSeismic HazardSharp Velocity Reduction
The boundary between the lithosphere and asthenosphere is associated with a platewide high-seismic velocity "lid" overlying lowered velocities, consistent with thermal models. Seismic body waves also intermittently detect a sharp velocity reduction at similar depths, the Gutenberg (G) discontinuity, which cannot be explained by temperature alone. We compared an anisotropic tomography model with detections of the G to evaluate their context and relation to the lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary (LAB). We find that the G is primarily associated with vertical changes in azimuthal anisotropy and lies above a thermally controlled LAB, implying that the two are not equivalent interfaces. The origin of the G is a result of frozen-in lithospheric structures, regional compositional variations of the mantle, or dynamically perturbed LAB.
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