Abstract

AbstractIn this study, we used the Pn tomography method to obtain detailed velocity and anisotropy structures of the uppermost mantle beneath Sakhalin–Kuril–Kamchatka region for improving the understanding of plate subduction, arc–arc collision, and volcanism. We found low Pn velocities beneath volcanoes and areas characterized by pronounced tectonic activity and high Pn velocities with strong anisotropy in the subducting plate. Low Pn velocity anomalies beneath southern Sakhalin connected the low‐velocity anomalies in the mantle and crust, indicating the ascent of fluid or melt, and may provide a magmatic source for the rear‐arc Rishiri volcano. In the absence of plate subduction, low‐velocity anomalies and north–south Pn anisotropy manifested beneath northern Kamchatka, revealing the lateral propagation of mantle flow beneath this northern region. We suggest that the eastern boundary of the slab window at the Kamchatka–Aleutian junction is likely to be located near the Komandorsky Islands.

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