[1] Subduction zones alter the upper plate in a variety of ways, including metasomatism via slab-derived fluids and accretion of exotic terranes. These processes should produce distinctive seismic signatures, as seismic velocities are sensitive to compositional variations. A new method is developed to estimates depths to interfaces and Poisson’s ratio (Vp/Vs ratio) for dipping layered structures, by stacking teleseismic receiver functions. It also estimates crustal Vp/Vs and thickness. Using this method, we analyze a broadband data set from the central Alaska subduction zone, to seek evidence for mantle wedge composition. Crustal thickness varies from 27 to 45 km, and crustal Vp/Vs indicates an intermediate to mafic composition, expected fo...
International audienceSubduction zones worldwide exhibit remarkable variation in seismic activity ov...
Some of the largest earthquakes worldwide, including the 1964 9.2 Mw megathrust earthquake, occurred...
The 410 and 660 km discontinuities (d410 and d660, respectively) beneath Alaska and adjacent areas a...
[1] Arc volcanism in Alaska is strongly correlated with the 100 km depth contour of the western Alue...
Characterized by repeated large earthquakes, slow slips, and tectonic tremors with their simultaneou...
A receiver function transect across the Alaska Range images the subducting Pacific plate at 50^150 k...
AbstractTo better understand the seismic structure of the subducting Pacific plate under Alaska, we ...
AbstractTo better understand the seismic structure of the subducting Pacific plate under Alaska, we ...
Alaska has been a site of subduction and terrane accretion since the mid‐Jurassic. The area features...
Subduction of tectonic plates is one of the most important tectonic processes, yet many aspects of s...
The southern Alaskan margin captures a transition between compression and strike-slip-dominated defo...
The earth’s largest earthquakes and tsunamis occur in the seismogenic zone of subduction margins, i....
The earth’s largest earthquakes and tsunamis occur in the seismogenic zone of subduction margins, i....
The mantle transition zone is the region between the globally observed major seismic velocity discon...
[1] Anelastic loss of seismic wave energy, or seismic attenuation (1/Q), provides a proxy for temper...
International audienceSubduction zones worldwide exhibit remarkable variation in seismic activity ov...
Some of the largest earthquakes worldwide, including the 1964 9.2 Mw megathrust earthquake, occurred...
The 410 and 660 km discontinuities (d410 and d660, respectively) beneath Alaska and adjacent areas a...
[1] Arc volcanism in Alaska is strongly correlated with the 100 km depth contour of the western Alue...
Characterized by repeated large earthquakes, slow slips, and tectonic tremors with their simultaneou...
A receiver function transect across the Alaska Range images the subducting Pacific plate at 50^150 k...
AbstractTo better understand the seismic structure of the subducting Pacific plate under Alaska, we ...
AbstractTo better understand the seismic structure of the subducting Pacific plate under Alaska, we ...
Alaska has been a site of subduction and terrane accretion since the mid‐Jurassic. The area features...
Subduction of tectonic plates is one of the most important tectonic processes, yet many aspects of s...
The southern Alaskan margin captures a transition between compression and strike-slip-dominated defo...
The earth’s largest earthquakes and tsunamis occur in the seismogenic zone of subduction margins, i....
The earth’s largest earthquakes and tsunamis occur in the seismogenic zone of subduction margins, i....
The mantle transition zone is the region between the globally observed major seismic velocity discon...
[1] Anelastic loss of seismic wave energy, or seismic attenuation (1/Q), provides a proxy for temper...
International audienceSubduction zones worldwide exhibit remarkable variation in seismic activity ov...
Some of the largest earthquakes worldwide, including the 1964 9.2 Mw megathrust earthquake, occurred...
The 410 and 660 km discontinuities (d410 and d660, respectively) beneath Alaska and adjacent areas a...