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Abstract The Southern Puna plateau in the central Andes has a complicated tectonic history that includes episodes of distributed shortening and extension, lithospheric delamination, uplift and Quaternary backarc volcanism. In this study, the upper crustal structure and present‐day deformation in this area is investigated using a new regional earthquake catalog derived with a deep‐learning‐based phase picker. Results show abundant strike‐slip seismicity at shallow depths in the eastern Southern Puna plateau that reveals active fault systems in the area and indicates N‐S extension/E‐W compression that changes orientation and relative magnitude from north to south. A broad zone of seismic quiescence in the western plateau may indicate a zone of upper crustal decoupling from large‐scale deformation. The region separating the western and eastern plateau exhibits a complex stress field that can be related to the boundary of east/west oriented middle‐to‐lower crustal flow in the main volcanic arc. Southeast of the plateau in the Sierras Pampeanas, crustal seismicity deepens and is dominated by conjugate reverse faulting structures associated with the direction of plate convergence. Vp and Vs seismic velocity models of the upper crust obtained through local earthquake tomography with the improved seismic catalog show low‐velocity anomalies near intermontane basins, except in the Antofagasta basin where a high‐velocity anomaly possibly represents shallow intrusive component of Quaternary basaltic volcanism. Below the Cerro Galan caldera, an upper crustal 10‐day long earthquake swarm is observed which may indicate local stress perturbations from fluids at the top of the crustal magmatic system that feeds this volcano.more » « less
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Abstract Volcanic arcs consist of many distinct vents that are ultimately fueled by the common melting processes in the subduction zone mantle wedge. Seismic imaging of crustal‐scale magmatic systems can provide insight into how melt is organized in the deep crust and eventually focused beneath distinct vents as it ascends and evolves. Here, we investigate the crustal‐scale structure beneath a section of the Cascades arc spanning four major stratovolcanoes: Mt. Hood, Mt. St. Helens (MSH), Mt. Adams (MA), and Mt. Rainier, based on ambient noise data from 234 seismographs. Simultaneous inversion of Rayleigh and Love wave dispersion constrains the isotropic shear velocity (Vs) and identifies radially anisotropic structures. IsotropicVsshows two sub‐parallel low‐Vszones (∼3.45–3.55 km/s) at ∼15–30 km depth with one connecting Mt. Rainier to MA, and another connecting MSH to Mt. Hood, which are interpreted as deep crustal magma reservoirs containing up to ∼2.5%–6% melt, assuming near‐equilibrium melt geometry. Negative radial anisotropy, from vertical fractures like dikes, is prevalent in this part of the Cascadia, but is interrupted by positive radial anisotropy, from subhorizontal features like sills, extending vertically beneath MA and Mt. Rainier at ∼10–30 km depth and weaker and west‐dipping positive anisotropy beneath MSH. The positive anisotropy regions are adjacent to rather than co‐located with the isotropic low‐Vsanomalies. Ascending melt that stalled and mostly crystallized in sills with possible compositional differences from the country rock may explain the near‐averageVsand positive radial anisotropy adjacent to the active deep crustal magma reservoirs.more » « less
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Abstract Deep‐focus earthquakes provide insight into how subducting slabs deform over a range of spatial and temporal scales as they descend into the mantle. This study uses a 4D source imaging approach to determine centroid locations of the 2015 Mw 7.9 Bonin Islands deep‐focus earthquake and its aftershock sequence. Imaged sources of the mainshock show a complex rupture, but one that is compatible with a sub‐horizontal rupture plane. Previously undetected early aftershocks are imaged down to depths of approximately 750 km and represent the first reported earthquakes that initiate in the lower mantle. These events and a previously reported group of shallower distal aftershocks occur at the lower and upper boundaries of an imaged slab segment that deforms as it penetrates into the lower mantle. We hypothesize that mainshock failure allowed gravitational settling of the slab segment to occur which produced the distal aftershock sequences.more » « less
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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.more » « less