From Symmetric Rifting to Asymmetric Spreading - Insights into Back-Arc
Formation in the Central Mariana Trough
Abstract
The Mariana Trough is the youngest back-arc basin in a series of basins
and arcs that developed behind the Mariana subduction zone in the
western Pacific. Active seafloor spreading is ongoing at a spreading
axis close the Mariana Arc resulting in a pronounced asymmetric
configuration (double rate to the west 2:1) at 17° N. The formation of
back-arc basins is controlled by the subducting slab, which regulates
the temporal development of mantle flow, entrainment of fluids and
hydrous melts together with the magma generation. To better understand
the formation process of back-arc basins and the asymmetry of the
central Mariana Trough, we combined 2-D P-wave traveltime tomography
results together with high-resolution bathymetric data. Here, we show
that the crust in the central Mariana Trough is 6.5-9.5 km thick, which
is unusual for oceanic crust. The lower crust exhibits average seismic
velocities of 6.5-7.2 km/s. High-velocity anomalies (7.4-7.9 km/s) in
the lower crust at the margins of the Mariana Trough indicate that
magmatic accretion process was affected by hydrous melting during
rifting. While the Mariana Trough developed from a rather symmetric
rifting (0.89:1) to a strongly asymmetric seafloor spreading stage
(5.33:1), the contribution of hydrous melts declined and the opening
direction changed. The asymmetric plate motions and the temporal change
of the slab component influenced strongly the formation of the back-arc
basin.