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      Implications of Flat‐Slab Subduction on Hydration, Slab Seismicity, and Arc Volcanism in the Pampean Region of Chile and Argentina

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          Abstract

          The Pampean flat slab in central Chile and Argentina is characterized by the inland migration and subsequent cessation of arc volcanism since the mid‐Miocene. Slab flattening also affects the distribution and number of intermediate‐depth earthquakes and the evolution of the overlying continental thermal structure. In this study, we combine thermal‐mechanical models with petrological models to examine temporal changes in pressure, temperature, and composition during flat‐slab subduction and estimate water carrying capacity, predicted melt distributions and predicted changes in melt composition. Model results indicate that the present‐day flattened Nazca plate carries water to ∼700 km inland from the trench and could cause flux melting if the material above the slab remains fertile. Observed slab seismicity matches areas where hydrated materials have ∼>3 wt% H 2O in the oceanic crust and mantle lithosphere. Seismicity increases as slab water carrying capacity decreases (slab dehydration). As P‐T conditions and compositions of the rock trapped above the slab change during slab flattening, flux melting switches from a peridotite‐dominated early phase to a combined mid‐ocean ridge basalt/eclogite and peridotite melting at ∼8 Ma. The results provide broad consistency with known earthquake distributions, seismic velocities, and observed temporal and spatial changes in volcanic patterns above the Pampean flat slab and point toward the role of melt depletion in the decrease and ultimate cessation of arc volcanism in this region.

          Key Points

          • We estimate the water carrying capacities, melt distributions, and composition during the Pampean flat‐slab subduction

          • The predicted hydrated areas match the observed slab seismicity in the Pampean region

          • Flux melting above the flat slab is predicted to migrate inland, providing constraints on the causes of the spatiotemporal changes in magmatism

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          Most cited references132

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          Generic Mapping Tools: Improved Version Released

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            Rheology of the upper mantle: a synthesis.

            S Karato, P Wu (1993)
            Rheological properties of the upper mantle of the Earth play an important role in the dynamics of the lithosphere and asthenosphere. However, such fundamental issues as the dominant mechanisms of flow have not been well resolved. A synthesis of laboratory studies and geophysical and geological observations shows that transitions between diffusion and dislocation creep likely occur in the Earth's upper mantle. The hot and shallow upper mantle flows by dislocation creep, whereas cold and shallow or deep upper mantle may flow by diffusion creep. When the stress increases, grain size is reduced and the upper mantle near the transition between these two regimes is weakened. Consequently, deformation is localized and the upper mantle is decoupled mechanically near these depths.
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              Age, spreading rates, and spreading asymmetry of the world's ocean crust

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
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                Journal
                Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems
                Geochem Geophys Geosyst
                American Geophysical Union (AGU)
                1525-2027
                1525-2027
                March 2024
                March 2024
                March 2024
                : 25
                : 3
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Department of Physics University of Alberta Edmonton AB Canada
                [2 ] Department of Earth Sciences University of Toronto Toronto ON Canada
                [3 ] Earth and Planets Laboratory Carnegie Institution for Science Washington DC USA
                [4 ] Department of Geosciences Virginia Tech Blacksburg VA USA
                Article
                10.1029/2023GC011317
                f692cf5d-f909-4169-bb3a-7d0b948ef72e
                © 2024

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

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