Geophysical Research Letters (Jun 2024)

Plate‐Scale Imaging of Eastern US Reveals Ancient and Ongoing Continental Deformation

  • Brennan Brunsvik,
  • Zachary Eilon,
  • Colton Lynner

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1029/2024GL109041
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 51, no. 12
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Eastern North America was constructed over several Wilson cycles, culminating in the breakup of Pangea. Previous seismological imaging lacked the resolution to depict precisely how ancient tectonic boundaries manifest throughout the lithosphere, how continental breakup modified the plate, or how ongoing mantle dynamics shapes the continental margin. We present a high‐resolution, plate‐scale seismic tomography model of the eastern US by combining an unprecedented suite of complementary data sets in a Bayesian framework. These data provide detailed resolution from crust to asthenosphere, identifying the base of the lithosphere and mid‐lithospheric discontinuities. The plate thins in steps that align with ancient orogens. The lithospheric step at the Appalachian front is associated with cells of mantle upwellings, likely edge‐driven convection, that erode the base of the plate and shape modern Appalachian topography. Low‐velocity structures in the lithospheric‐mantle align with the Grenville front and may be remnants of Rodinia assembly.

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