Abstract

This study explores the properties of the lithosphere–asthenosphere boundary (LAB) and other shallow mantle discontinuities across the diverse geologic provinces of the northwest United States. Sp phases were used to image three-dimensional discontinuity structure by common conversion point stacking with data from 804 temporary and permanent broadband stations, including 247 from EarthScope's USArray Transportable Array. Substantial variations in mantle discontinuity structure are apparent over a variety of spatial and temporal scales. To the west of the Sevier Thrust Belt, a coherent Sp negative phase coincides with the LAB depth range inferred from tomographic models. To the east, within the stable craton, multiple negative phases typically occur in the high velocity lithospheric layer, although in places a single mid-lithospheric discontinuity is imaged. Sub-cratonic LAB phases are often absent, indicating an LAB velocity gradient that is distributed over >50 km and that is consistent with effects of temperature alone. Where weak and intermittent LAB phases appear, they suggest more vertically localized velocity gradients produced by other factors such as bulk composition, volatile content, or contrasts in grain size or melt. In the tectonically active west, a positive Sp phase at depths consistent with the base of the asthenospheric low velocity zone in tomography models is intermittently observed. Beneath magmatic provinces in the west, the LAB Sp discontinuity deepens by ∼10 km from the High Lava Plains, where magmatism has occurred from 0–10.5 Ma, to the northern region of the Columbia River Basalts, which has been magmatically quiet since 15 Ma. Here we suggest a model in which the negative LAB velocity gradient is created by a layer of partial melt ponding beneath a solidus-defined boundary. This model predicts that higher temperatures associated with more recent magmatism would result in a shallowing of the intersection of the geotherm with the solidus. Beneath the Yellowstone Caldera, the absence of an LAB Sp phase suggests that the contrast in seismic velocity between the lithosphere and asthenosphere has been erased by intrusion of partial melt and heat into the lithosphere.

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