Publications by authors named "Don V Helmberger"

Article Synopsis
  • The 2004 Sumatra-Andaman earthquake highlighted the need to understand the seismic risks in subduction zones, particularly the Sunda megathrust.
  • In March 2005, another significant earthquake (M(w) 8.6) occurred in the region, raising concerns about potential large quakes in the Mentawai area, especially after previous major events in 1797 and 1833.
  • The 2007 earthquakes (M(w) 8.4 and 7.9) showed that the megathrust can rupture in different ways, and the stress from earlier events may not have been sufficient to produce a larger quake, indicating that the threat of significant earthquakes in the Mentawai area persists.
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Compressional waves that sample the lowermost mantle west of Central America show a rapid change in travel times of up to 4 s over a sampling distance of 300 km and a change in waveforms. The differential travel times of the PKP waves (which traverse Earth's core) correlate remarkably well with predictions for S-wave tomography. Our modeling suggests a sharp transition in the lowermost mantle from a broad slow region to a broad fast region with a narrow zone of slowest anomaly next to the boundary beneath the Cocos Plate and the Caribbean Plate.

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The seismic discontinuity at 410 km depth in the Earth's mantle is generally attributed to the phase transition of (Mg,Fe)2SiO4 (refs 1, 2) from the olivine to wadsleyite structure. Variation in the depth of this discontinuity is often taken as a proxy for mantle temperature owing to its response to thermal perturbations. For example, a cold anomaly would elevate the 410-km discontinuity, because of its positive Clapeyron slope, whereas a warm anomaly would depress the discontinuity.

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