Dry Juan de Fuca slab revealed by quantification of water entering Cascadia subduction zone

Water is carried by subducting slabs as a pore fluid and in structurally bound minerals, yet no comprehensive quantification of water content and how it is stored and distributed at depth within incoming plates exists for any segment of the global subduction system. Here we use seismic data to quant...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature geoscience 2017-11, Vol.10 (11), p.864-870
Hauptverfasser: Canales, J. P., Carbotte, S. M., Nedimović, M. R., Carton, H.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Water is carried by subducting slabs as a pore fluid and in structurally bound minerals, yet no comprehensive quantification of water content and how it is stored and distributed at depth within incoming plates exists for any segment of the global subduction system. Here we use seismic data to quantify the amount of pore and structurally bound water in the Juan de Fuca plate entering the Cascadia subduction zone. Specifically, we analyse these water reservoirs in the sediments, crust and lithospheric mantle, and their variations along the central Cascadia margin. We find that the Juan de Fuca lower crust and mantle are drier than at any other subducting plate, with most of the water stored in the sediments and upper crust. Variable but limited bend faulting along the margin limits slab access to water, and a warm thermal structure resulting from a thick sediment cover and young plate age prevents significant serpentinization of the mantle. The dryness of the lower crust and mantle indicates that fluids that facilitate episodic tremor and slip must be sourced from the subducted upper crust, and that decompression rather than hydrous melting must dominate arc magmatism in central Cascadia. Additionally, dry subducted lower crust and mantle can explain the low levels of intermediate-depth seismicity in the Juan de Fuca slab. The Juan de Fuca plate, which subducts below the Cascades, is remarkably dry, according to reconstructions of water content based on seismic data. Decompression rather than hydrous melting must therefore be responsible for Cascades volcanism.
ISSN:1752-0894
1752-0908
DOI:10.1038/ngeo3050