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  1. SUMMARY

    Despite progress in tomographic imaging of Earth's interior, a number of critical questions regarding the large-scale structure and dynamics of the mantle remain outstanding. One of those questions is the impact of phase-boundary undulations on global imaging of mantle heterogeneity and on geodynamic (i.e. convection-related) observables. To address this issue, we developed a joint seismic-geodynamic-mineral physical tomographic inversion procedure that incorporates lateral variations in the depths of the 410- and 660-km discontinuities. This inversion includes S-wave traveltimes, SS precursors that are sensitive to transition-zone topography, geodynamic observables/data (free-air gravity, dynamic surface topography, horizontal divergence of tectonic plates and excess core-mantle boundary ellipticity) and mineral physical constraints on thermal heterogeneity. Compared to joint tomography models that do not include data sensitivity to phase-boundary undulations in the transition zone, the inclusion of 410- and 660-km topography strongly influences the inference of volumetric anomalies in a depth interval that encompasses the transition zone and mid-mantle. It is notable that joint tomography inversions, which include constraints on transition-zone discontinuity topography by seismic and geodynamic data, yield more pronounced density anomalies associated with subduction zones and hotspots. We also find that the inclusion of 410- and 660-km topography may improve the fit to the geodynamic observables, depending on the weights applied to seismic and geodynamic data in the inversions. As a consequence, we find that the amplitude of non-thermal density anomalies required to explain the geodynamic data decreases in most of the mantle. These findings underline the sensitivity of the joint inversions to the inclusion of transition-zone complexity (e.g. phase-boundary topography) and the implications for the inferred non-thermal density anomalies in these depth regions. Finally, we underline that our inferences of 410- and 660-km topography avoid a commonly employed approximation that represents the contribution of volumetric heterogeneity to SS-wave precursor data. Our results suggest that this previously employed correction, based on a priori estimates of upper-mantle heterogeneity, might be a significant source of error in estimating the 410- and 660-km topography.

     
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  4. Abstract

    Multiple physical mechanisms have been proposed to explain the cause of intermediate‐depth and deep earthquakes, but they are still under debate. Source parameters such as stress drop, have the potential to provide insight into their physical mechanisms. We develop a modified spectral decomposition method to analyze 1‐year seismic data from temporary land‐based and ocean bottom seismographs in a complex subduction zone. By applying this method to investigate 1,083 intermediate‐depth and deep earthquakes in the Tonga slab, we successfully resolve the source spectra and stress drops of 743MW2.6–6.0 earthquakes. Although the absolute stress drops are subject to the choices of source model parameters, the relative stress drops are more reliably resolved. The median stress drop of Tonga earthquakes does not change with respect to magnitude but decreases with depth by 2–3 times in two separate depth ranges of 70–250 and 400–600 km, corresponding to intermediate‐depth and deep earthquakes, respectively. The median stress drops show spatial variations, with two high‐stress‐drop (five times higher than the ambient value) regions, coinciding with strong local deformation where the Tonga slab bends or tears. In the Tonga double seismic zone at 120–300 km depths, the median stress drop appears smaller in the lower plane than in the upper plane, suggesting a slower rupture velocity or a higher fluid content in the lower‐plane region. Our results suggest that intermediate‐depth and deep earthquakes in the Tonga slab generally follow the earthquake self‐similar model and favor the fluid‐related embrittlement hypothesis for both groups of earthquakes.

     
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  5. Abstract

    The distribution of intermediate‐depth and deep intraslab earthquakes with respect to subducting slabs offers a unique insight into seismogenesis at high pressures and temperatures that should inhibit brittle failure. This study constrains the surface of the subducting Pacific Plate beneath Japan at depths between 100 and 380 km based on a previous continental‐scale adjoint tomography model. Earthquake distributions relative to the slab surface reveal double seismic zones located within the top 60 km of the Pacific Plate. Thermal modeling suggests that the lower‐plane seismicity corresponds to temperatures between 400 and 900 °C. The seismogenic pressure and temperature conditions correlate approximately with the conditions of dehydration reactions of several hydrous minerals, that is, antigorite (serpentine) and chlorite at depths between 100 and 200 km and phase A at greater depths between 200 and 380 km. These correlations indicate that at these depths water released from dehydration processes may facilitate triggering slab mantle earthquakes.

     
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