Plumes in the Earth's deep mantle: Insights from Seismic waveform tomography

Oct 30, 2015

Time

14:00 - 16:00

Speaker

Barbara Romanowicz (IGP Paris / Berkeley Seismological Lab)

Abstract

Many questions remain on the detailed morphology of convection patterns in the mantle. With the advent of numerical methods for accurate seismic wavefield computations, it is now possible to apply the tools of waveform tomography to better detect the presence, throughout the mantle, of slow velocity anomalies, previously "hidden" by wavefront healing effects not captured by approximate wave propagation methods. Using waveform tomography based on the spectral element method (SEM), we have recently constructed a second-generation global, radially anisotropic, shear velocity whole mantle model, which shows better focused, finer scale low velocity structures both in the upper and in the lower mantle than in any previous global tomographic models. In particular, the lower mantle structure is dominated by vertically elongated structures that form discrete "columns" rooted at the base of the mantle, positioned in the vicinity of major hotspots lying over the large lower mantle low shear velocity provinces. The vertical conduits are quite straight from the base of the mantle to 1000 km depth, but wider (500-1000 km) than expected from the standard "plume" model. Their character changes above this depth, as they seem to become narrower and meander across the upper mantle, where they appear to interact with secondary scale convection set off by plate motions. I will also discuss the significance of the apparent rheological boundary around 1000 km depth.