Global seismic tomography reveals remnants of subducted Tethyan oceanic slabs in the deep mantle

被引:0
作者
Zewei Wang
Jiashun Hu
Xueyang Bao
Chunquan Yu
Yingjie Yang
Xiaofei Chen
机构
[1] Southern University of Science and Technology,Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Geophysical High
[2] Southern University of Science and Technology,resolution Imaging Technology
来源
Science China Earth Sciences | 2023年 / 66卷
关键词
Global seismic tomography; Tethyan evolution; Oceanic slabs; Lower-mantle structure; High-velocity anomaly;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The Tethyan evolution depicts the continuous process of landmasses separating from the Gondwana continent in the south, drifting northwards, and subsequently colliding with the continents in the north over the past 500 million years. In this process, the Tethyan oceans that formed between the landmass and the southern or northern continents underwent growth, evolution, and eventual closure with the early Cenozoic India-Eurasia collision. However, the Tethyan lithosphere did not disappear but rather continued to evolve after entering into the deep Earth. The current position, morphology, and volume of the subducted Tethyan oceanic slabs in the deep mantle record the latest moment of this continuous evolution, providing critical constraints for Tethyan studies. This paper summarizes and analyzes the results of global-scale whole-mantle seismic tomography in the past nearly two decades, revealing a northwest-southeast seismically high-velocity anomaly, which is linearly distributed at depths of 1000–2000 km beneath the Tethyan realm and referred to as the Tethyan anomaly. By searching for an optimal linear combination of previous global seismic tomographic models to best match the known subducted slabs in the upper mantle, we observe that the Tethyan anomaly extends approximately 8700 km in length and 2600 km in width, exhibiting a parallel structure with northern and southern branches. Combining geological records of oceanic subduction initiation and previous geodynamic studies, this study suggests that the main body of the Tethyan anomaly represents the remnants of the subducted Neo-Tethyan oceanic slabs, which subducted from the Late Jurassic to the early Cenozoic. The northern branch consists of subducted slabs from the Neo-Tethys beneath the southern margin of Eurasia, while the southern branch likely reflects the intra-oceanic subducted slabs of Neo-Tethys during the Cretaceous. The western portion of the Tethyan anomaly may reflect remnants of Paleo-Tethys, while the eastern portion, towards India and the Bay of Bengal, shows signs of subduction towards the core-mantle boundary. Finally, this study discusses the future prospects of whole-mantle seismic tomographic studies focusing on the Tethyan realm.
引用
收藏
页码:2751 / 2769
页数:18
相关论文
共 489 条
  • [1] Agard P(2011)Zagros orogeny: A subduction-dominated process Geol Mag 148 692-725
  • [2] Omrani J(2002)Origin and emplacement of the Late Cretaceous Baer–Bassit ophiolite and its metamorphic sole in NW Syria Lithos 65 225-260
  • [3] Jolivet L(2016)SALSA3D: Atomographic model of compressional wave slowness in the Earth’s mantle for improved travel-time prediction and travel-time prediction uncertainty Bull Seismol Soc Am 106 2900-2916
  • [4] Whitechurch H(2020)Early-stage lithospheric foundering beneath the eastern Tibetan Plateau revealed by full-wave Pn tomography Geophys Res Lett 47 e2019GL086469-30078
  • [5] Vrielynck B(2003)Jurassic to Miocene magmatism and metamorphism in the Mogok metamorphic belt and the India-Eurasia collision in Myanmar Tectonics 22 1019-1057
  • [6] Spakman W(1998)Closing the gap between regional and global travel time tomography J Geophys Res 103 30055-690
  • [7] Monié P(2003)An updated digital model of plate boundaries Geochem Geophys Geosyst 4 1027-13
  • [8] Meyer B(2011)Segmented African lithosphere beneath the Anatolian region inferred from teleseismic P-wave tomography Geophys J Int 184 1037-328
  • [9] Wortel R(2020)Seismic waveform tomography of the central and eastern Mediterranean upper mantle Solid Earth 11 669-1786
  • [10] Al-Riyami K(2014)Geological, tomographic, kinematic and geodynamic constraints on the dynamics of sinking slabs J Geodyn 73 1-87