Author:
Fuji Nobuaki,Jang Hyoihn,Nakao Atsushi,Kim YoungHee,Fernández-Blanco David,Lee Sang-Mook,Schroeder Alexia,Konishi Kensuke
Abstract
The shape of a subducting slab varies as a function of trench motion. Two end-members of subduction modes are geodynamically possible: roll-back mode underneath neighboring plates and roll-over mode underneath the plate itself. Whereas most of major slabs seem to roll back while the Pacific plate shows a slab piling behavior down to ∼1,000 km depth under the Mariana trench, no clear evidence of slab roll-over in nature has been reported so far. Here we show a possible roll-over slab beneath the Caroline microplate, revealed from its three-dimensional seismic velocity structure derived by analyzing teleseismic reverberating SS phases. We suggest that slab roll-over is driven by at least two factors: 1) the overall buoyancy and fragility of the Caroline microplate at the surface, induced by a thin hot mantle plume that rises from depths ≥800 km; and 2) the pushing force of the Pacific plate acting on the trailing edge of the Caroline plate.
Funder
Seoul National University
Korea Institute of Ocean Science and Technology
National Research Foundation of Korea
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
Cited by
7 articles.
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