Bluesky Facebook Reddit Email

USTC reveals how deep-focus seismicity controls Changbaishan volcanism

05.27.25 | University of Science and Technology of China

GQ GMC-500Plus Geiger Counter

GQ GMC-500Plus Geiger Counter logs beta, gamma, and X-ray levels for environmental monitoring, training labs, and safety demonstrations.


A research team led by Prof. ZHANG Haijiang from the University of Science and Technology of China (USTC), in collaboration with Dr. Robert Myhill from the University of Bristol, utilized tele-seismic double-difference tomography technology to uncover the morphological changes of the Pacific subducting slab in the mantle transition zone beneath Northeast China. In addition, they also reported its controlling effects on Changbaishan volcanic field (CVF) volcanism and deep earthquakes. This study was published in Nature Communications .

Cenozoic volcanoes are widely distributed in the northeast region of China, among which the CVF is the largest one. The CVF is a typical intraplate volcano. Currently, the formation mechanism of the CVF is still controversial. In addition, there is another remarkable geological feature in northeast China, a deep earthquake cluster about 300 km east of the CVF. It is usually thought that the formation mechanisms for deep earthquakes include dehydration embrittlement, adiabatic shear instability and so on. These mechanisms are mainly controlled by temperature conditions, but the thermochemical structure of the subduction zone along the strike remains basically unchanged in Northeast Asia. Hence, it is also unclear why the deep earthquakes concentrate in CVF.

The researchers utilized seismic arrival data from the Northeast Asia region received by global seismic stations, and constructed a high-resolution three-dimensional velocity model of over 1000 kilometers in depth using multi-scale double-difference tomography.

The results indicated that beneath the CVF, there was a phenomenon of a subducting slab locally inserting into the lower mantle, while its northern and southern sides were stagnant in the mantle transition zone.

The regions where the subducting slabs descend coincide with the local depressions of the 660-kilometer discontinuity interface in the mantle transition zone obtained from receiver function imaging.

The morphology changes of the subducting slabs from lying flat to descending and then to lying flat again from north to south within the mantle transition zone provides space for the upwelling of hot material beneath the slab, thus providing a deep mantle source for the volcanic activity of CVF.

In addition, the deep earthquake clusters concentrated along the curved part of the Pacific plate where it subducted through the 660, suggesting that the localized strong deformation produced by the slab when it subducts locally was the key mechanism for the occurrence of deep earthquakes.

This discovery provides a new perspective on the physical mechanism of deep-source earthquakes, and for the first time unifies the CVF volcanism with deep-source earthquakes, attributing them to the deep dynamical processes caused by the partial subduction of the Pacific plate through the 660-kilometer interface.

Nature Communications

10.1038/s41467-025-58053-5

Local slab penetration into lower mantle controls deep-focus seismicity and Changbaishan volcanism in northeast China

21-Mar-2025

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

Jane Fan
University of Science and Technology of China
qfan@ustc.edu.cn

How to Cite This Article

APA:
University of Science and Technology of China. (2025, May 27). USTC reveals how deep-focus seismicity controls Changbaishan volcanism. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/L590OQR8/ustc-reveals-how-deep-focus-seismicity-controls-changbaishan-volcanism.html
MLA:
"USTC reveals how deep-focus seismicity controls Changbaishan volcanism." Brightsurf News, May. 27 2025, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/L590OQR8/ustc-reveals-how-deep-focus-seismicity-controls-changbaishan-volcanism.html.