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<b>Using ambient noise tomography to reveal tectonic processes in the southern Cascadia forearc</b>

<p dir="ltr">The Cascadia subduction zone features many along-strike variations in geophysical signatures that appear independent of properties in the subducting Juan de Fuca plate. Past studies have hypothesized that controls on these variations, namely subcretion, seem linked to overriding plate characteristics but may be influenced by characteristics of the downgoing slab as well. Nowhere is this more apparent than in southern Cascadia, which features the highest seismogenesis, broadest forearc topography, and lowest Bouguer gravity along the Cascadia margin. Additionally, the northward migration of deformation related to the San Andreas fault’s evolution and potential subslab buoyancies introduce further complexities making it difficult to parse contributions of tectonic processes to individual geophysical observations. To better understand contributions from Cascadia subduction and San Andreas evolution on tectonic processes, 60 Magseis Fairview nodal seismometers were deployed in southern Cascadia (Klamath Mountains) between April and May of 2020. We perform ambient noise tomography using Rayleigh and Love waves to constrain radial anisotropy and reveal seismic characteristics in the forearc. We find low VSV (<3.4 km/s) in the lower crust of the forearc consistent with previous studies. This is paired with high (>10%) positive radial anisotropy suggesting these materials are dominated by (sub)horizontal fabrics. We also observe relatively high VSV and VSH and negative radial anisotropy (~ -10%) in the upper crust of the forearc to ~10 km depth. These results suggest that the upper crust, which is dominated by the Klamath terrane, is characterized by (sub-vertical) deformational fabrics, likely related to brittle deformation superimposed on the accretionary history of the Klamath terrane, while the lower crust shows fabrics consistent with what would be expected due to basal accretion of oceanic crust (e.g, sedimentary rocks with or without basaltic slivers). The correlation of positive radial anisotropy with low shear-wave velocities (~3.4 km/s), low Bouguer gravity, high conductivity, and high rates of seismogenic activity (LFEs, tremor distribution, and episodic slow slip events) suggest that this basally accreted material may be infiltrated by fluids derived from the downgoing oceanic lithosphere.</p>

  1. 10.25394/pgs.26359657.v1
Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:purdue.edu/oai:figshare.com:article/26359657
Date24 July 2024
CreatorsBrandon J Herr (19200814)
Source SetsPurdue University
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeText, Thesis
RightsCC BY 4.0
Relationhttps://figshare.com/articles/thesis/_b_Using_ambient_noise_tomography_to_reveal_tectonic_processes_in_the_southern_Cascadia_forearc_b_/26359657

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