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Ward's World MGH Earthquake Facts with TYU questions

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+ ward ' s science 5100 West Henrietta Road • PO Box 92912 • Rochester, New York 14692-9012 • p: 800 962-2660 • wardsci.com This article was originally published by McGraw Hill's AccessScience. Click here to view and find more articles like this. occur in the high-wave-speed anomalies that mark cold slabs, anomalies that have been traced to depths as great as 2000 km (1220 mi) or more. Curiously, earthquakes occur no deeper than 650–700 km (397–427 mi), far shallower than the maximum depths to which slabs descend. This abrupt shutoff and the gradual onset of the deep earthquake population at 300–350 km (183–214 mi) bracket approximately the transition zone of the mantle where seismic wave speeds abruptly increase (Fig. 5a). High-pressure experiments indicate that the mineralogy of the mantle changes at those depths and pressures from upper-mantle mineralogy (dominantly olivine and pyroxenes) to the minerals spinel, ilmenite, and majorite in the transition zone and, in turn, to the lower-mantle perovskite and oxide minerals. Slab mantle penetrating through the transition zone is expected to trans- form to these denser minerals. Most deep earthquakes occur in the depth interval of the transition zone where upper-mantle slab minerals are recon- structed to their denser structural forms. Attention has there- fore been drawn to the possibility that deep earthquakes are somehow caused by the mineralogical transformation of slabs as they descend into and through this region. Early speculation was that deep earthquakes represent rapid implosions that might occur when slab minerals transform suddenly to their denser, high-pressure forms. The patterns of seismic waves that radiate from deep earthquake sources indicate, however, that such disturbances represent slip on a fault, as do shallow earth- quakes. If a connection exists between deep earthquakes and mantle phase changes, the underlying process must facilitate failure by faulting. A clue to the nature of this possible connection comes from the observation that deep earthquakes do not occur in all slabs, only in those that are very cold because they are descend- ing at very fast rates. Low slab temperatures are important because such conditions favor the metastable persistence of upper-mantle minerals in the coldest interiors of slabs as they descend into the transition zone (Fig. 5b). Laboratory studies show that some minerals deformed under metastable condi- tions will rupture by an unusual shear instability in which the mineral is transformed to denser minerals in the shear zone. This shear instability, called transformational faulting, is not in- hibited by high-pressures and hence is an attractive candidate for the faulting mechanism of deep earthquakes. According to this theory, deep earthquakes do not occur in the lower mantle because low-density upper-mantle slab rocks are too buoyant to sink into the lower mantle. Earthquake (continued)

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