Evidence for deeply-subducted lower-plate seamounts at the Hikurangi
subduction margin: implications for seismic and aseismic behavior
- Bryant Chow,
- Yoshihiro Kaneko,
- John Townend
Abstract
Seamounts are found at many global subduction zones and act as seafloor
heterogeneities that affect slip behavior on megathrusts. At the
Hikurangi subduction zone offshore the North Island, New Zealand,
seamounts have been identified on the incoming Pacific plate and below
the accretionary prism, but there is little concrete evidence for
seamounts subducted past the present day coastline. Using a
high-resolution, adjoint tomography-derived velocity model of the North
Islan, New Zealand we identify two high-velocity anomalies below the
East Coast and an intraslab low-velocity zone up-dip of one of these
anomalies. We interpret the high-velocity anomalies as two
previously-unidentified, deeply-subducted seamounts, and the
low-velocity zone as fluid in the subducting slab. The seamounts are
inferred to be 10--30km wide and on the plate interface at 12--15km
depth. Resolution analysis using point spread functions confirm that
these are well-resolved features. The locations of the two seamounts
correlate with bathymetric features whose geometries are consistent with
those predicted from analog seamount subduction experiments. The spatial
characteristics of seismicity and slow slip events near the inferred
seamounts agree well with previous finite element modeling predictions
on the effects of seamount subduction on megathrust stress and slip.
Anomalous geophysical signatures, magnetic anomalies, and swarm
seismicity have also been observed previously at one or both seamount
locations. We propose that permanent fracturing of the northern
Hikurangi upper plate by repeated seamount subduction may be responsible
for the dichotomous geodetic behavior observed, and partly responsible
for along-strike variations in plate coupling on the Hikurangi
subduction interface.Jan 2022Published in Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth volume 127 issue 1. 10.1029/2021JB022866