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.
Letter: A sharp lithosphere–asthenosphere boundary imaged beneath eastern North America
Catherine A. Rychert, Karen M. Fischer and Stéphane Rondenay
doi: 10.1038/nature03904
First paragraph | Full Text | PDF (1,358K) | Supplementary information

