Small-scale thermal upwellings under the Northern East African Rift from S travel-time tomography
Small-scale thermal upwellings under the Northern East African Rift from S travel-time tomography
There is a long-standing debate over how many and what types of plumes underlie the East African rift and whether they do or do not drive its extension and consequent magmatism and seismicity. Here we present a new tomographic study of relative teleseismic S and SKS residuals that expands the resolution from previous regional studies below the northern East African Rift to image structure from the surface to the base of the transition zone. The images reveal two low-velocity clusters, below Afar and west of the Main Ethiopian Rift, that extend throughout the upper mantle and comprise several smaller-scale (about 100-km diameter) low-velocity features. These structures support those of our recent P tomographic study below the region. The relative magnitude of S to P residuals is around 3.5, which is consistent with a predominantly thermal nature of the anomalies. The S- and P-velocity anomalies in the low-velocity clusters can be explained by similar excess temperatures in the range of 100-200?°C, consistent with temperatures inferred from other seismic, geochemical and petrological studies. Somewhat stronger VS anomalies below Afar than west of the MER may include an expression of volatiles and/or melt in this region. These results, together with a comparison with previous larger scale tomographic models, indicate that these structures are likely small-scale upwellings with mild excess temperatures, rising from a regional thermal boundary layer at the base of the upper mantle.
tomography, S-velocity, East Africa, mantle plumes, transition zone
7395-7408
Civiero, C.
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Goes, S.
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Hammond, J.O.S.
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Fishwick, S.
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Ahmed, A.
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Ayele, A.
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Doubre, C.
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Goitom, B.
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Keir, D.
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Kendal, J-M.
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Leroy, S.
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Ogubazghi, G.
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Rumpker, G.
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Stuart, G.W.
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11 November 2016
Civiero, C.
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Goes, S.
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Hammond, J.O.S.
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Fishwick, S.
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Ahmed, A.
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Ayele, A.
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Doubre, C.
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Goitom, B.
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Keir, D.
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Kendal, J-M.
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Leroy, S.
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Ogubazghi, G.
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Rumpker, G.
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Stuart, G.W.
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Civiero, C., Goes, S., Hammond, J.O.S., Fishwick, S., Ahmed, A., Ayele, A., Doubre, C., Goitom, B., Keir, D., Kendal, J-M., Leroy, S., Ogubazghi, G., Rumpker, G. and Stuart, G.W.
(2016)
Small-scale thermal upwellings under the Northern East African Rift from S travel-time tomography.
Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 121 (10), .
(doi:10.1002/2016JB013070).
Abstract
There is a long-standing debate over how many and what types of plumes underlie the East African rift and whether they do or do not drive its extension and consequent magmatism and seismicity. Here we present a new tomographic study of relative teleseismic S and SKS residuals that expands the resolution from previous regional studies below the northern East African Rift to image structure from the surface to the base of the transition zone. The images reveal two low-velocity clusters, below Afar and west of the Main Ethiopian Rift, that extend throughout the upper mantle and comprise several smaller-scale (about 100-km diameter) low-velocity features. These structures support those of our recent P tomographic study below the region. The relative magnitude of S to P residuals is around 3.5, which is consistent with a predominantly thermal nature of the anomalies. The S- and P-velocity anomalies in the low-velocity clusters can be explained by similar excess temperatures in the range of 100-200?°C, consistent with temperatures inferred from other seismic, geochemical and petrological studies. Somewhat stronger VS anomalies below Afar than west of the MER may include an expression of volatiles and/or melt in this region. These results, together with a comparison with previous larger scale tomographic models, indicate that these structures are likely small-scale upwellings with mild excess temperatures, rising from a regional thermal boundary layer at the base of the upper mantle.
Text
Civiero_et_al-2016-Journal_of_Geophysical_Research__Solid_Earth(1).pdf
- Accepted Manuscript
Text
jgrb51820.pdf
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 2 October 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 21 October 2016
Published date: 11 November 2016
Keywords:
tomography, S-velocity, East Africa, mantle plumes, transition zone
Organisations:
Geology & Geophysics
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 401882
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/401882
PURE UUID: 449d08fe-5db9-4c0a-844b-e2e799c968b2
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Date deposited: 21 Oct 2016 15:53
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:38
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Contributors
Author:
C. Civiero
Author:
S. Goes
Author:
J.O.S. Hammond
Author:
S. Fishwick
Author:
A. Ahmed
Author:
A. Ayele
Author:
C. Doubre
Author:
B. Goitom
Author:
J-M. Kendal
Author:
S. Leroy
Author:
G. Ogubazghi
Author:
G. Rumpker
Author:
G.W. Stuart
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