SEISMIC IMAGING OF THE PACIFIC NORTHWESTERN UNITED STATES
From a structural standpoint, tomographic images show clear evidence for a laterally and radially complex Juan de Fuca / Gorda slab, which extends to depths of 500 km and perhaps deeper. Beneath southern Oregon and northern Nevada, the subducting slab appears to be bifurcated at depths of ~500 km. Upper mantle discontinuity imaging suggests cooler temperatures (perhaps the subducting slab) at greater depths, with an overall thicker mantle transition zone and a deeper 660 km discontinuity to the east. Beneath Yellowstone and the eastern Snake River Plain, reduced seismic velocities are not limited to a simple plumelike configuration in the upper mantle; rather, they are focused in a zone of extremely low velocities in the uppermost 200 km. From 200 to 700 km, the reduced velocity zone appears as a coherent, dipping sheetlike structure across the region. At shallow depths, very low velocities exist beneath the central Cascades and the eastern Snake River Plain.
From a dynamic standpoint, seismic anisotropy imaging for the region demonstrates a complex mantle fabric, likely due in large part to mantle flow. While the predominant fast direction is ~E-W, significant variations exist across the region, suggesting a complex flow field for many regions with the exception of the High Lava Plains.