Title of article
Seismic evidence for a rapidly varying compositional anomaly at the base of the Earths mantle beneath the Indian Ocean
Author/Authors
Wen، Lianxing نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages
-82
From page
83
To page
0
Abstract
Seismic observations recorded by an African seismic array reveal a low velocity anomaly at the base of the mantle beneath the Indian Ocean, with steeply dipping edges, rapidly varying thicknesses and geometries, and anomalously low shear wave velocities decreasing from -2% at 200 km above the core–mantle boundary to -9% to -12% at the core–mantle boundary (relative to the preliminary reference Earth model). These characteristics unambiguously suggest that it is a compositional anomaly and its velocity structures can be well explained by partial melt driven by a compositional change produced early in the Earthʹs history. This chemical anomaly geographically coincides with the DUPAL geochemical anomaly observed in island volcanoes around the Indian Ocean and may provide an explanation for its distinctive isotope characteristics observed at the Earthʹs surface.
Keywords
noble gases , neon , stable isotopes , Bismarck Sea , back-arc basins
Journal title
EARTH & PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
Serial Year
2001
Journal title
EARTH & PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
Record number
53412
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