No.282 Geodynamics Seminar
"Effects of trench migration on fall of stagnant
slabs into the lower mantle"
Dr. Shoichi Yoshioka
(Professor, Research Center for Urban Safety and Security, Kobe University)
4:30 pm 〜, 7 January 2011
Meeting room "Glova", 4 floor, Integrated Research
Building
Abstract
Global seismic tomography has recently revealed horizontally lying slabs
near the upper and lower mantle boundary beneath the Northwestern Pacific
region. Although physical mechanisms that could produce such slab stagnation
have been proposed based on numerical simulations, there has been little
research into what occurs after slab stagnation. We proposed trench advance
and trench jumps as effective mechanisms related to the fall of stagnant
slabs into the lower mantle, and our numerical simulations of temperature
and fluid flow associated with slab subduction in a 2-D box model confirmed
these mechanisms. Our results indicate that a supply of slab material associated
with further slab subduction after slab stagnation plays an important role
in differentiating further slab stagnation from the falling of slabs into
the lower mantle. A shortage of material supply would produce extended
slab stagnation near the 660-km boundary for ringwoodite to perovskite
+ magnesiowstite phase transformation, whereas downward force due to further
slab subduction on a stagnant slab would enhance its fall into the lower
mantle. The behaviors of falling stagnant slabs were not affected by Clapeyron
slope values associated with phase equilibrium transformation within the
range from -3.0 to 0.0 MPa/K. Compared with models of normal mantle viscosity,
a high-viscosity lower mantle played a role in hindering the fall of slabs
into the lower mantle, resulting in complicated shapes and slow falling
velocities. Lower mantle viscosity structure also affected slab behavior.
Slabs tended to stagnate when a low-viscosity zone (LVZ) existed just below
a depth of 660 km because friction between the slab and the LVZ was weak
there. Slab stagnation around a depth of 660 km also occurred when a high-viscosity
zone existed below a depth of 1200 km and acted as a resistive force against
a slab, even if the slab existed in the lower part of the upper mantle.
For inquiry:Taku Tsuchiya TEL:(089)927-8198
E-mail takut@sci.ehime-u.ac.jp
