| Literature DB >> 19965755 |
Cecily J Wolfe1, Sean C Solomon, Gabi Laske, John A Collins, Robert S Detrick, John A Orcutt, David Bercovici, Erik H Hauri.
Abstract
Defining the mantle structure that lies beneath hot spots is important for revealing their depth of origin. Three-dimensional images of shear-wave velocity beneath the Hawaiian Islands, obtained from a network of sea-floor and land seismometers, show an upper-mantle low-velocity anomaly that is elongated in the direction of the island chain and surrounded by a parabola-shaped high-velocity anomaly. Low velocities continue downward to the mantle transition zone between 410 and 660 kilometers depth, a result that is in agreement with prior observations of transition-zone thinning. The inclusion of SKS observations extends the resolution downward to a depth of 1500 kilometers and reveals a several-hundred-kilometer-wide region of low velocities beneath and southeast of Hawaii. These images suggest that the Hawaiian hot spot is the result of an upwelling high-temperature plume from the lower mantle.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19965755 DOI: 10.1126/science.1180165
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728