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Creators/Authors contains: "Byrnes, Joseph"

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  1. Dixon, Jackie (Ed.)
    Abstract The upper mantle under the Afar Depression in the East African Rift displays some of the slowest seismic wave speeds observed globally. Despite the extreme nature of the geophysical anomaly, lavas that erupted along the East African Rift record modest thermal anomalies. We present measurements of major elements, H2O, S, and CO2, and Fe3+/ΣFe and S6+/ΣS in submarine glasses from the Gulf of Aden seafloor spreading center and olivine‐, plagioclase‐, and pyroxene‐hosted melt inclusions from Erta Ale volcano in the Afar Depression. We combine these measurements with literature data to place constraints on the temperature, H2O, andfO2of the mantle sources of these lavas as well as the initial and final pressures of melting. The Afar mantle plume is C/FOZO/PHEM in isotopic composition, and we suggest that this mantle component is damp, with 852 ± 167 ppm H2O, not elevated infO2compared to the depleted MORB mantle, and has temperatures of ∼1401–1458°C. This is similar infO2and H2O to the estimates of C/FOZO/PHEM in other locations. Using the moderate H2O contents of the mantle together with the moderate thermal anomaly, we find that melting begins at around 93 km depth and ceases at around 63 km depth under the Afar Depression and at around 37 km depth under the Gulf of Aden, and that ∼1%–29% partial melts of the mantle can be generated under these conditions. We speculate that the presence of melt, and not elevated temperatures or high H2O contents, are the cause for the prominent geophysical anomaly observed in this region. 
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  2. Abstract The Salton Trough is one of the few regions on Earth where rifting is subaerial instead of submarine. We use the relative attenuation of teleseismic P phases recorded by the Salton Trough Seismic Imaging Project to investigate lithospheric and asthenospheric structures that form during extension. Map‐view analysis reveals stronger attenuation within the Salton Trough than in the adjacent provinces. We then construct tomographic models for variations in seismic attenuation with depth to discriminate between crustal and mantle signals with a damped least squares approach and a Bayesian approach. Synthetic tests show that models from damped least squares significantly underestimate the strength of attenuation and cannot separate crustal and mantle signals even if the tomographic models are allowed to be discontinuous at the lithosphere‐asthenosphere boundary (LAB). We show that a Bayesian approach overcomes these problems when inverting the same synthetic data sets and that shallow and deep signals are more clearly separated when imposing a discontinuity. With greater than 95% confidence, the results reveal first, that attenuation occurs primarily beneath the LAB; second, that the width of the attenuative region is narrower than the rift at 120 km depth; and third, that the strength of attenuation requires that the attenuative feature represents a melting‐column similar to those beneath mid‐ocean ridges. The narrow width of the melting column below the volatile‐free solidus is inconsistent with models for passive upwelling, where flow is driven only by rifting. Instead, we attribute the generation of incipient oceanic crust to mantle upwelling focused by buoyancy into a narrow diapir. 
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  3. Abstract The Wyoming Craton underwent tectonic modifications during the Laramide Orogeny, which resulted in a series of basement‐cored uplifts that built the modern‐day Rockies. The easternmost surface expression of this orogeny ‐ the Black Hills in South Dakota ‐ is separated from the main trend of the Rocky Mountains by the southern half of the Powder River Basin, which we refer to as the Thunder Basin. Seismic tomography studies reveal a high‐velocity anomaly which extends to a depth of ∼300 km below the basin and may represent a lithospheric keel. We constrain seismic attenuation to investigate the hypothesis that variations in lithospheric thickness resulted in the localization of stress and therefore deformation. We utilize data from the CIELO seismic array, a linear array that extends from east of the Black Hills across the Thunder Basin and westward into the Owl Creek Mountains, the BASE FlexArray deployment centered on the Bighorn Mountains, and the EarthScope Transportable Array. We analyze seismograms from deep teleseismic events and compare waveforms in the time‐domain to characterize lateral variations in attenuation. Bayesian inversion results reveal high attenuation in the Black Hills and Bighorn Mountains and low attenuation in the Thunder and Bighorn Basins. Scattering is rejected as a confounding factor because of a strong anticorrelation between attenuation and the amplitude ofPwave codas. The results support the hypothesis that lateral variations in lithospheric strength, as evidenced by our seismic attenuation measurements, played an important role in the localization of deformation and orogenesis during the Laramide Orogeny. 
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