Petrological studies have suggested that oceanic crust is formed during the initial stage of subduction. However, there is little geophysical evidence for the formation of oceanic crust in the fore-arc region. We conducted an active-source seismic survey in the fore-arc region of the Izu-Bonin intraoceanic arc to examine processes of crustal formation associated with the initiation of subduction. We used seismic refraction tomography to obtain a detailed seismic velocity model and diffraction-stack migration of picked reflection travel times to derive reflectivity images. These data show a remarkably thin crust (<10 km thick) along the northern half of the Bonin ridge and abrupt crustal thickening (to ∼20 km) toward the south of the ridge. Comparison of velocity-depth profiles of the thin fore-arc crust of the Bonin ridge with those of typical oceanic crusts showed them to be seismologically identical. Boninitic magmatism is evident in the area of thin crust and tholeiitic-calcalkaline andesitic volcanism in the area of thick crust. High-precision dating of the volcanic rocks showed that the thin fore-arc oceanic crust was created soon after initiation of subduction (48-45 Ma) and that the nonoceanic thick crust was created with tholeiitic-calcalkaline andesitic magmatism after the boninitic magmatism was ceased. Our seismological image strongly supports the view that fore-arc oceanic crust was formed by fore-arc spreading during the initial stage of subduction along the Izu-Bonin intraoceanic arc. © 2010 by the American Geophysical Union.
CITATION STYLE
Kodaira, S., Noguchi, N., Takahashi, N., Ishizuka, O., & Kaneda, Y. (2010). Evolution from fore-arc oceanic crust to island arc crust: A seismic study along the Izu-Bonin fore arc. Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 115(9). https://doi.org/10.1029/2009JB006968
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