Editor's Summary

28 July 2005

Plate tectonics on the rocks


Although a rigid lithosphere (about 100 km of crust and uppermost mantle) moving over a weaker asthenosphere (a few hundred kilometres of more deformable rock) is a widely accepted aspect of plate tectonics, the properties of the boundary between them are poorly understood. When compressional waves (P-waves) from an earthquake encounter an interface at an angle, some of the energy is converted to shear waves (or S-waves). These 'converted' waves can be used to construct an image of the interface. Based on converted waves recorded in eastern North America, the lithosphere–asthenosphere boundary has been resolved as a sharp gradient that cannot be explained by thermal gradients alone, indicating that the boundary is controlled by melt or high water content in the asthenosphere.

LetterA sharp lithosphere–asthenosphere boundary imaged beneath eastern North America

Catherine A. Rychert, Karen M. Fischer and Stéphane Rondenay

doi: 10.1038/nature03904

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