Abstract

The dynamics of continental subduction is largely controlled by the rheological properties of rocks involved along the subduction channel. Serpentinites have low viscosity at geological strain rates. However, compelling geophysical evidence of a serpentinite channel during continental subduction is still lacking. Here we show that anomalously low shear-wave seismic velocities are found beneath the Western Alps, along the plate interface between the European slab and the overlying Adriatic mantle. We propose that these seismic velocities indicate the stacked remnants of a weak fossilised serpentinite channel, which includes both slivers of abyssal serpentinite formed at the ocean floor and mantle-wedge serpentinite formed by fluid release from the subducting slab. Our results suggest that this serpentinized plate interface may have favoured the subduction of continental crust into the upper mantle and the formation/exhumation of ultra-high pressure metamorphic rocks, providing new constraints to develop the conceptual and quantitative understanding of continental-subduction dynamics.

Highlights

  • The dynamics of continental subduction is largely controlled by the rheological properties of rocks involved along the subduction channel

  • Lithosphere rheology is a key parameter to understand the dynamics of continental subduction following the closure of paleo-oceans during convergence between tectonic plates

  • The deep configuration of this subduction wedge is increasingly well documented by geophysical data[14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22], but a high-resolution image of seismic velocity structure for the deepest levels of the plate interface is still missing

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Summary

Introduction

The dynamics of continental subduction is largely controlled by the rheological properties of rocks involved along the subduction channel. We apply a Bayesian transdimensional (TransD) inversion technique[27,28,29] to invert Rayleigh wave group velocity dispersion data

Results
Conclusion
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