Abstract

The rheology of the seismically imaged Lithosphere-Asthenosphere Boundary (LAB) is an important new question in plate tectonics. If the LAB is associated with ponding of partial melts as inferred from many seismic studies, it should have a low viscosity that minimizes resistance to plate motion and subduction. Here, we propose that recently observed postseismic enhanced landward motion (ELM) in coastal areas outside the rupture zone of large subduction earthquakes provides the first geodetic evidence for a low-viscosity LAB beneath subducting oceanic lithosphere. Using three-dimensional viscoelastic finite element models, we demonstrate that a low-viscosity LAB readily leads to postseismic ELM over broad coastal areas far beyond the rupture zone. If the LAB thickness is assumed to be 10 km, key spatiotemporal characteristics of the observed ELM can be well explained by an LAB viscosity of 5 × 1016 Pa s, orders of magnitude lower than typical asthenospheric viscosities. A thicker LAB such as 20 km with a higher viscosity may also explain the postseismic ELM but is incompatible with existing, albeit limited, near-field vertical deformation observations. The small thickness and the low viscosity of the model LAB are consistent with inferences from seismological observations and support the notion of ponding melts. Our preliminary weak-LAB models also predict diagnostic deformation features that can be tested by future onshore and offshore geodetic observations. Whether a weak LAB is ubiquitously present before and after plate subduction and how its presence and spatial heterogeneity impact postseismic and plate-scale deformation are important research targets for future investigations.

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