Cr. Bina et G. Helffrich, PHASE-TRANSITION CLAPEYRON SLOPES AND TRANSITION ZONE SEISMIC DISCONTINUITY TOPOGRAPHY, J GEO R-SOL, 99(B8), 1994, pp. 15853-15860
The depths, widths, and magnitudes of the 410-km and 660-km seismic di
scontinuities are largely consistent with an isochemical phase change
origin, as is the observation that the topography on these discontinui
ties is negatively correlated and significantly smaller than predicted
for chemical changes. While most thermodynamic studies of the relevan
t phase changes predict greater topography on the 410 than the 660, re
cent seismic studies suggest greater topography on the 660. The seismi
c results are consistent with some recent thermochemical studies which
suggest that the Clapeyron slopes of the perovskite-forming reactions
exceed in magnitude those of the spinel-forming reactions; however, w
e have reexamined the relevant Clapeyron slopes in light of other, mor
e recent, experimental studies as well as the requirements of internal
thermodynamic consistency. We conclude that the bulk of the evidence
indicates a greater Clapeyron slope magnitude for the 410 than for the
660. Thus the recent seismic results are unexpected. One explanation
might be that lateral temperature variations near 660 km depth exceed
those near 410, consistent with a model of the 660 as a thermal bounda
ry layer. An alternate interpretation, which requires neither a therma
l boundary nor metastable olivine, is that the 410 does possess greate
r topography but is simply less visible seismically than the 660. This
latter idea, and recent short-period observations of P'410P' seismic
phases in conjunction with an elevated 660, is consistent with thermod
ynamic modeling of subduction zones illustrating the extreme broadenin
g of the olivine alpha-->beta transition in cold slab interiors and, c
onversely, its sharpening in regions of high temperature.