It. Bjarnason et al., INITIAL RESULTS FROM THE ICEMELT EXPERIMENT - BODY-WAVE DELAY TIMES AND SHEAR-WAVE SPLITTING ACROSS ICELAND, Geophysical research letters, 23(5), 1996, pp. 459-462
We present results from the first stage of the ICEMELT broadband seism
ometer experiment designed to determine upper mantle structure beneath
Iceland, a hotspot located on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. Relative delays
of teleseismic body waves across Iceland are in excess of 1 s for P w
aves and as large as 3 s for S waves. The patterns of P and S wave del
ays suggest a low-velocity anomaly in the upper few hundred kilometers
beneath central Iceland, consistent with the signature of mantle upwe
lling beneath a hotspot. Shearwave splitting measurements of the fast
polarization direction phi and the delay time delta t between the fast
and slow shear waves have been obtained at several network stations.
Splitting times range from 0.7 to 1.7 s, and fast directions are gener
ally between N20 degrees W and N45 degrees W. While splitting times of
this magnitude must be primarily signatures of the anisotropy of the
Icelandic upper mantle, the directions of fast polarization are incons
istent with simple models of horizontally diverging flow either in the
plate spreading direction or radially from the center of the hotspot.
A hypothesis consistent with splitting data obtained to date is that
the dominant contribution to upper mantle anisotropy is from the large
-scale mantle flow field of the North Atlantic.