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- Title
Evidence From Intermediate‐Depth Earthquakes of Slab‐Derived Fluids Beneath the Taupō Volcanic Zone.
- Authors
Mark, O. K.; Illsley‐Kemp, F.; Townend, J.; Barker, S. J.
- Abstract
Ahi Tupua, the central section of the Taupō Volcanic Zone in the central North Island of New Zealand, encompasses Taupō and Ōkataina calderas and has been the most frequently active and productive silicic magma system worldwide during the Quaternary. The entire Taupō Volcanic Zone is underlain by the Hikurangi Subduction Zone where a Large Igneous Province, the Hikurangi Plateau, is being subducted, but Ahi Tupua exhibits much higher rates of magma output than either the northern or the southern sections. Trace element signatures of Ahi Tupua eruptive products suggest that both decompression melting and flux melting play a role in this rifted arc setting, with fluid flux signatures being more prevalent in regions of active caldera volcanism. Intermediate‐depth (50–300 km) earthquakes provide a means of studying faulting and fluid flow processes within and around the subducting slab beneath Ahi Tupua. Using data from the national seismic network and a 13‐station temporary network ("ECLIPSE"), we repick and relocate 397 intermediate‐depth earthquakes of magnitudes M2.5+ that occurred in a 29‐month interval, and compute focal mechanisms for a subset of 47 earthquakes. We observe some seismicity that may be within the mantle wedge but most of the relocated earthquakes occur within the crust and uppermost mantle of the subducted slab and exhibit a weak transition from predominantly normal‐faulting in the slab crust to predominantly reverse‐faulting in the slab mantle. No double seismic zone is observed beneath Ahi Tupua. These observations are consistent with dehydration of the slab and flow of slab‐derived fluids along existing faults into the mantle wedge, that drives flux melting and accounts for the distinctive geochemical signatures and voluminous output of Ahi Tupua calderas. Plain Language Summary: Ahi Tupua is a volcanic region in the North Island of New Zealand that is the most active silicic volcanic system on Earth. It includes the active caldera volcanoes Taupō and Ōkataina. This volcanic region lies above the Hikurangi Subduction Zone, and studies of past eruptions suggest that Ahi Tupua's high rate of activity is driven by fluids released deep in the subduction zone. In this study, we use seismic data from across the entire North Island to investigate earthquakes occurring at depths of 50–300 km within the Hikurangi Subduction Zone. We show that these earthquakes suggest that the subducting oceanic crust is releasing a substantial amount of water into the overlying mantle, causing a large amount of melting and, ultimately, the distinctive volcanism of Ahi Tupua. Key Points: We relocate 397 intermediate‐depth earthquakes beneath Ahi Tupua, central Taupō Volcanic Zone, and compute 47 focal mechanismsMost seismicity occurs within the slab crust and mantle, with subordinate mantle wedge and plate interface faultingHypocenters and focal mechanisms are consistent with slab‐derived fluid fluxing melting of the mantle wedge beneath Ahi Tupua
- Subjects
NORTH Island (N.Z.); NEW Zealand; SUBDUCTION zones; VOLCANIC eruptions; EARTHQUAKES; SLABS (Structural geology); EARTHQUAKE magnitude; SEISMIC networks; IGNEOUS provinces; VOLCANISM; FAULT zones
- Publication
Journal of Geophysical Research. Solid Earth, 2024, Vol 129, Issue 5, p1
- ISSN
2169-9313
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1029/2023JB028586