Abstract

AbstractThe Hawaiian Islands represent the youngest portion of the long‐lived Hawaiian‐Emperor Seamount chain sourced from hotspot volcanism on the northwesterly moving Pacific plate. Despite being one of the best studied hotspots on Earth, our understanding of the lithospheric discontinuity structure of Hawaiʻi is inhibited by a lack of a long‐term distributed broadband seismic network and lithospheric‐scale imaging of other oceanic hotspots. In this study, we analyze 3,530 teleseismic waveforms from 1,130 events recorded at 47 stations to compute P‐wave radial receiver functions. We then incorporate an elevation correction to adaptive common conversion point stacking to create a 3D discontinuity volume of the lithospheric structure associated with an ocean island hotspot. We find a positive amplitude conversion consistently at ∼12 km below sea level, likely representing the crust‐mantle transition below much of the island. However, this conversion occurs at only ∼6 km below Kīlauea, where local tomography images a zone of high P‐wave velocities (>7 km/s) within the crust and deformation of olivine phenocrysts within a magmatic reservoir is thought to occur. At this location, seismicity also extends vertically to 35 km depth before merging with an interpreted sill complex at ∼40 km. We interpret this anomalously shallow high amplitude discontinuity as an olivine‐dominated magmatic reservoir with an estimated maximum 5% melt over the resolution of our data at crustal depths. This represents the shallow seismic signature of a much more extensive magma system extending to depth. These images provide a better understanding of the magmatic structure associated with oceanic hotspot volcanoes.

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