Abstract
The stagnation and dehydration of the Pacific Plate slab in the mantle
transition zone are widely accepted to have resulted in Mesozoic and
Cenozoic volcanic activities and the formation of the Songliao Basin in
NE China. However, this notion has been challenged by recent seismic
studies. Alternatively, a mantle plume may have generated large-scale
volcanism and led to the formation of the Songliao Basin. In this study,
a detailed analysis involving common conversion point (CCP) stacking of
receiver functions was carried out. The results reveal a significantly
deepened region of the 410 km discontinuity and an elevated region of
the 660 km discontinuity in the centre of NE China (or the Songliao
Basin). The combination of these results with those of a previous study
suggests that an upwelling mantle plume was located under the centre of
the Songliao Basin in the Mesozoic. Furthermore, the distinctive
structure of the mantle transition zone (MTZ) beneath the southern part
of the Songliao Basin identified in this study is correspond to mantle
plume upwelling (a mushroom-shaped low-velocity anomaly), which may be
related to the Changbaishan volcanic activities in the Cenozoic.