International audienceA wide range of geophysical/petrological data indicates that large amounts of water are released in subduction zones during the burial of oceanic lithosphere through metamorphism and associated dehydration reactions. Large volumes of aqueous fluids are expected and observed in the mantle wedge, just below the continental Moho. Recent estimates suggest that the mantle wedge is heterogeneously serpentinized (generally 20-30%). This serpentinization is believed to cause a significant weakening of the mantle wedge and therefore may critically control the depth of interplate seismogenic coupling. However, data constraining mechanisms driving deep (50-200km) fluid circulation are lacking and fluid-rock interaction processes ...
Geological processes at subduction zones control seismicity, plutonism and volcanism, and geochemica...
Recent seismic observations have shown that low-frequency earthquakes occur in nonvolcanic regions i...
Bending of oceanic plates at subduction zones results in extension and widespread normal faulting(1)...
International audienceA wide range of geophysical/petrological data indicates that large amounts of ...
International audienceBoth geophysical and petrological data suggest that large amounts of water are...
Subducting oceanic plates carry a considerable amount of water from the surface down to mantle depth...
The occurrence of intermediate depth earthquakes at 50-300 km depth in subduction zones is puzzling,...
The occurrence of intermediate depth seismicity (70-300 km) is commonly attributed to the dehydratio...
24 pages, 14 figures, 1 table, supplementary data https://doi.org/10.1130/GES01537.1The subducting o...
Subduction zones are the main entry points of water into Earth's mantle and play an important role i...
The presence of magmatism and intermediate-depth (70–300 km deep) seismicity at subduction zones is ...
AbstractThe effects of water on subduction dynamics, e.g., plate migration rate, slab geometry, stre...
Subduction of the lithosphere into the mantle at convergent plate boundaries takes place asymmetrica...
Subducting plates release fluids as they plunge into Earth’s mantle and occasionally rupture to prod...
We use a petrological model (pHMELTS), coupled with a 2D thermal and variable viscosity flow model (...
Geological processes at subduction zones control seismicity, plutonism and volcanism, and geochemica...
Recent seismic observations have shown that low-frequency earthquakes occur in nonvolcanic regions i...
Bending of oceanic plates at subduction zones results in extension and widespread normal faulting(1)...
International audienceA wide range of geophysical/petrological data indicates that large amounts of ...
International audienceBoth geophysical and petrological data suggest that large amounts of water are...
Subducting oceanic plates carry a considerable amount of water from the surface down to mantle depth...
The occurrence of intermediate depth earthquakes at 50-300 km depth in subduction zones is puzzling,...
The occurrence of intermediate depth seismicity (70-300 km) is commonly attributed to the dehydratio...
24 pages, 14 figures, 1 table, supplementary data https://doi.org/10.1130/GES01537.1The subducting o...
Subduction zones are the main entry points of water into Earth's mantle and play an important role i...
The presence of magmatism and intermediate-depth (70–300 km deep) seismicity at subduction zones is ...
AbstractThe effects of water on subduction dynamics, e.g., plate migration rate, slab geometry, stre...
Subduction of the lithosphere into the mantle at convergent plate boundaries takes place asymmetrica...
Subducting plates release fluids as they plunge into Earth’s mantle and occasionally rupture to prod...
We use a petrological model (pHMELTS), coupled with a 2D thermal and variable viscosity flow model (...
Geological processes at subduction zones control seismicity, plutonism and volcanism, and geochemica...
Recent seismic observations have shown that low-frequency earthquakes occur in nonvolcanic regions i...
Bending of oceanic plates at subduction zones results in extension and widespread normal faulting(1)...