Seismic tomography has provided key insight into Yellowstone’s crustal magmatic system that includes attempts to understand the melt distribution in the subsurface and the current stage of the volcano’s life cycle. We present new tomographic images of the shear wave speed of the Yellowstone magmatic system based on full waveform inversion of ambient noise correlations, which illuminates shear wave speed reductions of greater than 30% associated with Yellowstone’s silicic magma reservoir. The slowest seismic wave speeds (shear wave speed less than 2.3 kilometers per second) are present at depths between 3 and 8 kilometers, overlapping with petrological estimates of the assembly depth of erupted rhyolite bodies. Assuming that Yellowstone’s magmatic system is a crystal mush with broadly distributed melt, we estimate a partial melt fraction of 16 to 20%.
A challenge in interpreting the origins of seismic anisotropy in deformed continental crust is that composition and rheology vary with depth. We investigated anisotropy in the northeastern Basin and Range where prior studies found prevalent depth‐averaged positive radial anisotropy (VSH > VSV). This study focuses on depth‐dependence of anisotropy and potentially distinct structures beneath three metamorphic core complexes (MCCs). Rayleigh and Love wave dispersion were measured using ambient noise interferometry, and Bayesian Markov chain Monte Carlo inversions for VS structure were tested with several (an)isotropic parameterizations. Acceptable data fits with minimal introduction of anisotropy are achieved by models with anisotropy concentrated in the middle crust. The peak magnitude of anisotropy from the mean of the posterior distributions ranges from 3.5–5% and is concentrated at 8–20 km depth. Synthetic tests with one uniform layer of anisotropy best reproduce the regional mean results with 9% anisotropy at 6–22 km depth. Both magnitudes are plausible based on exhumed middle crustal rocks. The three MCCs exhibit ~5% higher isotropic upper crustal VS, likely due to their anomalous levels of exhumation, but no distinctive (an)isotropic structures at deeper depths. Regionally pervasive middle crustal positive radial anisotropy is interpreted as a result of subhorizontal foliation of mica‐bearing rocks deformed near the top of the ductile deformation regime. Decreasing mica content with depth and more broadly distributed deformation at lower stress levels may explain diminished lower crustal anisotropy. Absence of distinctive deep crustal VS beneath the MCCs suggests overprinting by ductile deformation since the middle Miocene.
Surface wave tomography is widely used to improve our understanding of continental magma reservoirs that may be capable of fueling explosive volcanic eruptions. However, traditional surface wave tomography based on inversions for phase velocity maps and locally 1D shear velocity may have difficulty resolving strong 3D low‐velocity anomalies associated with crustal magma reservoirs. Here, we perform synthetic tomography experiments based on 3D seismic waveform simulations to understand how the limitations of surface wave tomography could affect interpretations of tomography in volcanic settings. We focus our modeling on the Yellowstone volcanic system, one of the largest and most thoroughly studied continental magmatic systems, and explore scenarios in which the maximum shear velocity anomaly associated with the crustal magma reservoir ranges between −10% and −66%. We find that even with the well‐instrumented setting near Yellowstone, the recovered shear velocity anomalies in the mid‐to‐upper crust are severely diminished due to the small spatial scale of the reservoir with respect to the seismic wavelengths that sample it. In particular, recovered VS anomalies could be reduced by a factor of two or more, implying that the inferred melt fraction of large‐scale continental magma reservoirs may be considerably underestimated.
The Cenozoic Colorado Plateau physiographic province overlies multiple Precambrian provinces. Its ∼2-km elevation rim surrounds an ∼1.6-km elevation core that is underlain by thicker crust and lithospheric mantle, with a sharp structural transition ∼100 km concentrically inboard of the physiographic boundary on all but its northeastern margin. The region was uplifted in three episodes: ∼70–50 Ma uplift above sea level driven by flat-slab subduction; ∼38–23 Ma uplift associated with voluminous regional magmatism and slab removal, and less than 20 Ma uplift associated with inboard propagation of basaltic magmatism that tracked convective erosion of the lithospheric core. Neogene uplift helped integrate the Colorado River from the Rockies at 11 Ma to the Gulf of California by ∼5 Ma. The sharp rim-to-core transition defined by geological and geophysical data sets suggests a young transient plateau that is uplifting as it shrinks to merge with surrounding regions of postorogenic extension. ▪ The Colorado Plateau's iconic landscapes were shaped during its 70-million-year, still-enigmatic, tectonic evolution characterized by uplift and erosion. ▪ Uplift of the Colorado Plateau from sea level took place in three episodes, the youngest of which has been ongoing for the past 20 million years. ▪ Tectonism across the Colorado Plateau's nearest plate margin (the base of the plate!) is driving uplift and volcanism and enhancing its rugged landscapes. ▪ The bowl-shaped Colorado Plateau province is defined by ongoing uplift and an inboard sweep of magmatism around its margins. ▪ The keel of the Colorado Plateau is being thinned as the North American plate moves southwest through the underlying mantle. Expected final online publication date for the Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Volume 50 is May 2022. Please see http://www.annualreviews.org/page/journal/pubdates for revised estimates.
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