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Intraslab Earthquakes: Dehydration of the Cascadia Slab
99
Citations
20
References
2003
Year
GeophysicsPlate TectonicsEarthquake LocationsEngineeringSeismic WaveSeismologyNorthwest Washington StateMantle DynamicIntraslab EarthquakesGeographySubduction ZoneEarthquake SourceGeologyRegional TectonicsEarth ScienceTectonics
We simultaneously invert travel times of refracted and wide-angle reflected waves for three-dimensional compressional-wave velocity structure, earthquake locations, and reflector geometry in northwest Washington state. The reflector, interpreted to be the crust-mantle boundary (Moho) of the subducting Juan de Fuca plate, separates intraslab earthquakes into two groups, permitting a new understanding of the origins of intraslab earthquakes in Cascadia. Earthquakes up-dip of the Moho's 45-kilometer depth contour occur below the reflector, in the subducted oceanic mantle, consistent with serpentinite dehydration; earthquakes located down-dip occur primarily within the subducted crust, consistent with the basalt-to-eclogite transformation.
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