Dynamics of the Ryukyu/Izu-Bonin-Marianas double subduction system
Résumé
Trench motions represent the surface expression of the interaction between subducting plates and the underlying
mantle, but the inherent dynamics are not fully understood. One interesting case is the migration of the Izu-Bonin Marianas trench (IBM) that accommodates the subduction of the Pacific beneath the Philippine Sea Plate (PSP), which is in turn subducting beneath the Eurasian plate along the Ryukyu trench. The history of the IBM trench is dominated by fast, episodic retreat from 40 to 15 Ma. However, around 10–5 Ma, the IBM trench
reversed its motion from retreat to advance. The switch in trench motion occurred soon after the breakoff of the
PSP slab along the Ryukyu trench and the onset of new subduction, and represents a fundamental change in the
dynamics of the western Pacific subduction zones. Here, Following the modelling study of Čížková and Bina
(2015), which suggested a link between IBM trench advance and Ryukyu subduction, we run 2-D numerical
experiments to test the influence of a newly formed Ryukyu slab on the established IBM subduction zone, we run
two-dimensional numerical experiments to test the influence of this newly formed Ryukyu slab on the IBM
subduction zone. The results from our geodynamic model compare favourably with the reconstructed trend, indicating that the switch in trench motion along the IBM trench may indeed be related to the onset of a new subduction zone along the Ryukyu trench. Our analysis substantiates the idea that advancing trench motions in the western Pacific are due to the establishment of a double subduction system. Further analysis of such dynamics provides insights for the mechanisms controlling subducting plate and trench motions and mantle force transmission.