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The 2003 Bullerwell Lecture Tectonics of th Abstract Understanding the nature of the Earth’s core–mantle boundary region has implications for a wide range of Earth processes. Here I discuss seismic properties of this region, using new imaging techniques developed by myself and colleagues. Our interpretations are guided by linked geodynamical modelling, and cumulatively suggest that many of the seismic properties – heterogeneity and anisotropy – of the lowermost mantle can be explained by subduction processes that extend to the base of the mantle. D″ In their early seismic models Jeffreys and Bullen (1940) divided the Earth into concentric shells based on changes in velocity gradients. Regions of the Earth were named with letters and the lower mantle (from 670 km to 2890 km deep) was divided into D, D′ and D″ (read Ddouble-prime). D″ is the only commonly used vestige of this nomenclature and refers to the lowermost few 100 kms of mantle. This shell shows the largest lateral variations in seismic velocities in the lower mantle. Variations in the ratio of P-wave to S-wave velocities suggest that the region may be compositionally different from the overlying mantle. In certain areas there are thin (<30 km) basal layers of ultra-low velocities at the CMB. A weak (<3%) discontinuity in seismic velocities lies on average nearly 270 km above the CMB and is visible as it reflects seismic energy back to the surface. However, this discontinuity shows considerable variability in both strength and distance from the CMB. There is also mounting evidence for more discrete small-scale velocity anomalies that scatter seismic energy. Finally, in many areas D″ exhibits seismic anisotropy, evidence of which lies in the observation of two orthogonally polarized and independent shear-waves. A good review of these observations can be found in an AGU monograph entitled The Core-Mantle Boundary Region (Gurnis et al. 1998). 2.30 The Bullerwell Lecture is an annual award given by the British Geophysical Association. Michael Kendall here presents the 2003 lecture. T here are many unanswered questions about the nature of the Earth’s deep interior and, contrary to recent Hollywood films, it is unlikely that we will ever be able to answer these questions with first-hand observations. Instead we must use other imaging methods to probe the deep Earth, the primary one being seismology. The base of the Earth’s mantle lies nearly 3000 km beneath us and marks a dramatic boundary between the overlying silicate or “rocky” mantle and the molten-iron outer core. This interface is in many ways as dramatic as the boundary between lithosphere and atmosphere, where we live. Despite its apparent remoteness, the nature of the core–mantle boundary (CMB) affects the Earth’s behaviour in many ways: thermal coupling with the core affects the Earth’s magnetic field, lateral heterogeneity affects the Earth’s moment of inertia and hence its length of day, and thermal instabilities may instigate mantle plumes that rise to form hot spots like Iceland and Hawaii. But there is still much to be learned about the composition of the lower mantle. Experiments in mineral physics provide constraints on the composition and mineralogy at depth that aid in the interpretation of seismic observations, but there remain many unknowns. Another long-standing question in geophysics concerns mantle convection, notably its continuity through the depth of the mantle. Geochemical arguments suggest only limited mass transfer between the upper and lower mantle, yet geodynamical simulations suggest convection across the entire mantle. As a result, seismologists have sought to test this issue by looking for evidence of slabs of subducted lithosphere in the lower mantle (e.g. Grand et al. 1997). Here I summarize recent work by myself and colleagues to investigate the structure and properties of the lowermost mantle (see box, left). Dense broadband seismic networks now produce large datasets, which in turn demand new techniques for analysis. Seismic migration techniques borrowed from oil-industry data processing are used to image the fine-scale velocity discontinuity structure of what appears to be cold slab-like material at the base of the mantle beneath northern Asia. In separate work we look for evidence of seismic anisotropy in the lower mantle beneath the northern Pacific Ocean. Anisotropy refers to directional variations in seismic speed at a given point and may result from the preferred alignment of minerals, oriented inclusions, or layering; it is likely that more than one of these mechanisms may be operating at one time. Such effects are caused by deformation processes and, as such, evidence of anisotropy offers insights into the dynamical nature of the lower mantle. Together, these methods map the velocity structure, seismic properties and lateral variation of this remote but significant region of our planet. D″ discontinuities and the thermal properties of slabs In the migration study we use shear-wave data recorded by broadband three-component seismic stations in networks across Europe (figure 1). Most are permanent stations, but some were deployed in a temporary network designed to image the deep Earth (Kendall and Helffrich 2001). Large deep-focus earthquake events in the northwest Pacific are 68–82° away from the European stations and image the base of the mantle beneath northern Asia. A seismic discontinuity in the D″ region will produce a reflection (SdS) that will appear on a seismogram as a precursor to ScS (see figure 2). A wellknown velocity discontinuity lies roughly 280 km above the CMB in our study region (see, for example, Lay and Helmberger 1983), but dense seismic arrays or networks allow us to map detailed variations in the topography of this discontinuity. We look for seismic signals reflected from this region using stations whose bounce points cluster in regions roughly the size of a Fresnel zone (i.e. the lateral resolution expected for these waves) (figure 1). We use a seismic migration technique developed by Thomas et al. (1999) to stack the seismic signals, thereby pinpointing reflector locations. Travel-times are calculated for raypaths between stations and hypothetical reflection points in a 3-D grid that extends roughly 1500 km2 across the CMB and nearly 700 km above the CMB. Seismic data for each cluster are time-shifted and summed for each of the hypothetical reflection points in the grid. The data will sum coherently should a grid point lie at an actual reflection point. An advantage of this approach is that is allows us to accurately April 2004 Vol 45 The 2003 Bullerwell Lecture e lower mantle 1: Stations and events used to image the lowermost mantle beneath northern Asia. The reflection points are grouped into eight elliptically shaped regions, roughly the size of a Fresnel zone. Smaller circles are colour coded according to individual earthquakes (see legend). The underlying colours show the tomographic model of Grand et al. (1997); blue indicates higher than average seismic velocities and red means lower than average velocities. 2: Seismic phases that can be used to image the lowermost mantle. A discontinuity in the D″ region will reflect seismic energy back to the surface (the SdS phase). At epicentral distances less then 80°, only the corereflected phases, ScS, will sample the D″ region, while at greater distances both the S and ScS phase will sample D″. The phase SKS transits the mantle as an S-wave and the core as a P-wave. Analogous phases exist for P-waves (e.g. PcP, PKP, etc). UMA refers to upper-mantle anisotropy. April 2004 Vol 45 UMA 660 75° 90° ScS S SdS S ScS SKS core SKS D″ 2.31 The 2003 Bullerwell Lecture frequency seismic energy. Such signals will appear as seismic reflections and tests with synthetic seismograms show that these signals will be imaged with our seismic migration technique (Thomas et al. 2004). There is a qualitative agreement between the migration results for the data and those for the synthetic waveforms calculated in regions of cold slab accumulations. This suggests that the thermal structure of subducted material can explain our observations: we are simply seeing reflections from the top and bottom of the cold slabs. top structure (206 to 316 km) 320 280 distance from CMB (km) 3: Interpolated topography of two D″ discontinuities observed beneath northern Asia. The top surface marks an abrupt increase in seismic velocity, while the bottom marks an abrupt decrease in seismic velocity closer to the base of the mantle. 240 200 160 bottom structure 120 (5585 km) 80 40 70°N 90°E 80°E 4: A snapshot of the temperature field from a mantle convection calculation (Lowman et al. 2003), in which slab-like downwellings accumulate at the base of the mantle. These features spread laterally in D″ and exhibit strong undulations in their upper surfaces, but less topography on their lower surfaces. Vertical lines indicate where temperature profiles are used to construct velocity models. The top 150 km of temperature field (boundary layer) is removed in order to reveal features below the plates. position energy that is reflected from a discontinuity with complicated topography. Most previous approaches have determined discontinuity depth on the assumption that the reflector is a horizontal planar feature. In accordance with previous studies, our results show clear evidence for a reflector due to a rapid, but modest (3%), increase in seismic velocity roughly 280 km above the CMB. However, the migrations reveal dramatic variations in the topography of this discontinuity: it varies from 206 to 345 km above the CMB (figure 3). A more surprising result is the presence of a weaker reflector between 55 and 85 km above the CMB. In contrast to the upper discontinuity, this reflection is due to a sharp decrease in seismic velocity; it also shows less topography. The reflections from the upper discontinuity are stronger because they are at nearcritical angles of incidence. The critical angle is the point of total internal reflection, which only occurs when there is an increase in velocity across a boundary. The weaker deeper reflections have never been observed in a single seismogram and are only visible by coherently stacking many seismograms. To interpret our migration results we appeal 2.32 to recent numerical simulations of 3-D mantle convection (Lowman et al. 2004). These models incorporate rigid moving plates and have an Earth-like Bénard-Rayleigh number. Heating is supplied in equal amounts from internal sources and an isothermal bottom boundary (i.e. the core). The models have Cartesian geometry and the calculations do not include temperaturedependent viscosity. Further details of these simulations can be found in Thomas et al. (2004). These geodynamical simulations predict a complicated thermal structure at the base of the mantle (figure 4). Here cold slab-like features crumple and deform as they collide with the CMB. Regions of remnant slab material show sharp decreases in temperature a few hundreds of kilometres above the CMB and very sharp increases in temperature much nearer the CMB. Considerable topography appears on the upper surface of these cold slab anomalies. In contrast, regions without cold slab material show a simple increase in temperature near the CMB. We have constructed velocity models based on the temperature profiles through the thermal structures illustrated in figure 4. Sharp positive or negative gradients in velocity, due to sharp temperature gradients, will backscatter low- Seismic anisotropy A range of seismic indicators suggest that the lowermost mantle is anisotropic. The decay in amplitudes of phases that diffract around the CMB shows dramatic regional variations. Doornbos et al. (1986) sought to explain this in terms of a D″ thermal-boundary layer model. More recently, D″ anisotropy has been more clearly documented by the observation of shearwave splitting in the S/ScS phase that sweeps through the lowermost mantle (e.g. arrivals at 90° in figure 2). There are a range of mechanisms for seismic anisotropy (figure 5), but all require sustained and coherent deformation in regions hundreds of kilometres across (i.e. on the length scale of seismic waves in the lower mantle). Although we are still in the early stages of mapping on a global scale the extent and nature of anisotropy in the lower mantle, we can loosely group past observations into two categories based on regional characteristics (figure 6). One is associated with regions where slabs are predicted to descend into the lower mantle (Lithgow-Bertelloni and Richards 1998). These regions are characterized by high D″ shearvelocities and examples are the areas beneath the Americas, Indian Ocean, northern Asia and Alaska. The other category involves sites of mantle upwelling (e.g. beneath the Pacific), which are characterized by lower than average D″ velocities. The style of anisotropy in the paleo-slab regions appears to be transverse isotropy. This symmetry is characterized by a rotational invariance in seismic velocities around a vertical symmetry axis (i.e. there is no azimuthal variation in velocities). Core phases, like SKS, do not seem to be affected by D″ anisotropy in these regions (a characteristic of transverse isotropy) and the horizontally polarized shear-waves which transit the D″ region horizontally (S/ScSH) are ubiquitously faster than the radially polarized shear-waves (S/ScSV). In contrast, the anisotropy of the Pacific region appears less consistent implying that it is probably more complicated. Previous studies have focused on differences between shear-waves recorded on radial and transverse components. Many studies even neglect the potential effects of well-known anisotropy in shallower parts of the upper April 2004 Vol 45 The 2003 Bullerwell Lecture 5: Schematic illustration of mechanisms for seismic anisotropy. The upper left illustrates anisotropy due to the preferred alignment of minerals (LPO), the upper right, lower left and lower right show anisotropy due to the preferred alignment of tabular and cylindrical shaped inclusions (SPO), and the middle diagram shows anisotropy due to the layering of material with contrasting seismic velocities (PTL). LPO is short for lattice preferred orientation, SPO means shape preferred orientation and PTL means periodic thin layering. The nature of shear-wave splitting in the vertical and two horizontal directions is indicated along the edges of each schematic cube. Vsv refers to a shear-wave polarized in the vertical plane, while Vsh refers to a shear-wave polarized in the horizontal plane. no splitting splitting? LPO SPO Vsv > Vsh splitting? no splitting PTL Vsh > Vsv splitting splitting SPO SPO Vsh > Vsv Vsh > Vsv Vsv > Vsh 60 30 0 –30 –60 6: Regions of the world where D″ anisotropy has been previously studied. Coloured lines connect events (stars) and seismic stations along great-circle paths. Red regions are those where the style of anisotropy appears to be transverse isotropy. The light blue lines beneath the Pacific mark a region where the style of anisotropy appears to be quite complicated. The purple region beneath the southern Pacific is an area where there seems to be little evidence of D″ anisotropy. Blue dots mark the predicted locations of slabs at the CMB (Lithgow-Bertelloni and Richards 1998). April 2004 Vol 45 2.33 The 2003 Bullerwell Lecture mantle. Collectively this suggests that although the lowermost mantle may be anisotropic, such analysis may restrict interpretations to simple anisotropic symmetries (e.g. transverse isotropy). One way to address this issue involves a judicious selection of source–receiver paths that sample regions from many azimuths. In most parts of the world this is nearly impossible because there are too few appropriately placed sources and receivers. An alternative approach is to consider differential splitting between S-phases which turn above the D″ region and ScS-phases which sample the D″ region (figure 2). One has to be careful with such analysis because standard techniques for estimating shear-wave splitting cannot be used without accounting for phase distortions in the ScS phase that arise from reflection at the CMB. Using such an approach we have found evidence for a more complex style of anisotropy in a region of the northwest Pacific (figure 7). The style of anisotropy is most simply interpreted as transverse isotropy with a dipping symmetry axis. The orientation of the anisotropy roughly agrees with the known dip of the D″ discontinuity in this region (Thomas et al. 2002). Mechanisms for lower-mantle anisotropy are still a topic of some debate, largely due to our limited knowledge of the material properties of lower-mantle mineral assemblages. An obvious candidate mechanism for anisotropy is the preferred alignment of minerals such as perovskite, magnesiowustite or stishovite. Given what little we know of the elasticities and glide systems of minerals at lower-mantle pressures and temperatures, it has not been easy to explain transverse isotropy in D″ with these minerals. However, recent work (Karato 1998) has suggested that magnesiowustite may change its glide system in the lowermost mantle and could explain transverse isotropy in paleo-slab regions. Crystal alignment could also be responsible for anisotropy in more complicated regions, such as that beneath the central and northwest Pacific. Another candidate mechanism for anisotropy is the preferred alignment of inclusions or finescale layering of material with contrasting velocities. Kendall and Silver (1996) proposed melt alignment as a cause of transverse isotropy in D″. Using effective-medium modelling they showed that very small volume fractions of melt, if highly aligned, will not affect the overall velocity of the region, but will generate significant amounts of shear-wave splitting. Infiltration of core material may explain the presence of melt, but it is difficult to imagine iron-rich core material, which is twice as dense as lower-mantle rocks, rising to heights of a few hundred kilometres above the CMB. Alternatively, the anisotropy may be associated with subduction processes. There is some suggestion that when basalt (oceanic crust) sinks into the lower mantle it will be very near its solidus in its new phase. Should just 1% of this 2.34 7: A region beneath the northern Pacific where the style of D″ anisotropy is not simply transversely isotropic. The region is imaged using differential shear-wave splitting between lower-mantle turning S-phases that do not sample D″ and core-reflected shear-waves (see S and ScS in figure 2). The shading and arrow displayed at each source-receiver midpoint displays the orientation of the fast shear-wave in the vertical plane perpendicular to the horizontal ray direction. For example, 0 refers to a vertically polarized fast shear-wave, while 90 refers to a horizontally polarized fast shear-wave. 150 160 170 180 190 60 60 50 50 40 –45– –15 –15–15 15–45 45–75 75–105 105–135 160 former-basalt exist in aligned melt pockets it could explain the observed anisotropy. The high strains associated with slab material interacting with the CMB can be invoked to explain the alignment of either crystals or inclusions. In summary, there are clear regional variations in the style of D″ anisotropy that are very likely to be associated with different physical processes. In this sense, these variations are analogous to those observed between continental and oceanic regions in the upper-mantle boundary layer (i.e. the lithosphere). While these observations are interesting from a seismological point of view, they are equally if not more valuable as constraints on the mineralogy and geodynamics of the lower mantle. Effect of slabs on lower-mantle structure I have summarized recent work that investigates the heterogeneity and anisotropy of the lowermost mantle or D″ region. Linking these seismic observations with state-of-the-art geodynamical modelling has offered insights into mechanisms responsible for these observations. Our geodynamical models suggest that the thermal structure of D″ may be very complicated. Cold slab material can crumple and spread out at the CMB. For the first time we have been able to image the top and bottom of a high-velocity anomaly at the base of the mantle and we interpret this in the context of slab thermal structure. While there is likely to be a degree of compositional heterogeneity in D″ (e.g. originating from former oceanic crust or primordial material), the thermal structure of the region can explain the discontinuity structure. Similarly, we can look to subduction processes to explain anisotropy in parts of the lowermost mantle. Cumulatively, our results provide indirect evidence that slabs can reach the CMB in places, thereby supporting the idea of convection on a whole-mantle scale. At this stage it is difficult to be more definitive in our interpretations. As seismic networks grow 40 170 180 we will be better able to characterize the style of D″ heterogeneity and anisotropy. As geodynamical modelling becomes more Earth-like, we will be better able to model and predict such heterogeneity and anisotropy. Finally, as both laboratory and theoretical experiments in mineral physics become more realistic for the lower mantle, we will gain a better understanding of the elasticities and deformation processes in lowermantle phases. Linking studies from these various disciplines is needed to better illuminate the nature of the somewhat enigmatic D″ region. ● Michael Kendall, Professor of Seismology, School of Earth Sciences, University of Leeds, Leeds, LS2 9JT, UK. [email protected]. Acknowledgements: This work has been done in collaboration with many people. Specifically I would like to thank Tine Thomas, Julian Lowman, Georg Rümpker and James Wookey for their contributions. Part of this research has been supported by a consortium grant from the UK Natural Environment Research Council (NER/O/S/2001/01227) and by a standard NERC grant (GR3/11738). I am grateful to the British Geophysical Association for selecting me to be the Bullerwell Lecturer in 2003. References Doornbos D J et al. 1986 Phys. Earth Planet. Int. 41 225–239. Grand S P et al. 1997 GSA Today 7 1–7. Gurnis M et al. 1998 The Core-Mantle Boundary Region Geodynamic Series 28 American Geophysical Union, Washington DC, 334. Jeffreys H and K E Bullen 1940 Seismological Tables British Association Seismological Committee, London, UK. Karato S 1998 Earth Planets and Space 50 1019–28. Kendall J-M and G Helffrich 2001 SPICeD A&G 42 3.26–3.29. Kendall J-M and P G Silver 1996 Nature 381 409–12. Lay T and D V Helmberger 1983 Geophys. J. R. Astr. Soc. 75 799–837. Lithgow-Bertelloni C and M A Richards 1998 Rev. Geophys. 36 27–78. Lowman J P et al. 2004 Geochem. Geophys. Geosystems 5 doi:10.1029/2003GC000583. Thomas C et al. 1999 J. Geophys. Res. 104 15 073–88. Thomas C et al. 2002 J. Geophys. Res. 107 doi:10.1029/2000JB000021. Thomas C, J-M Kendall and J Lowman 2004 Lower mantle seismic discontinuities and the thermal morphology of subducted slabs, submitted to Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. April 2004 Vol 45