“…While temperature clearly plays a role in creating high seismic velocities in the mantle lithosphere (Hirth & Kohlstedt, 2003; Stixrude & Lithgow‐Bertelloni, 2005) additional factors have been invoked to produce negative velocity gradients that are vertically localized, including the presence of volatiles and partial melt in the asthenosphere, elastically accommodated grain boundary sliding, near‐solidus weakening, and seismic anisotropy (e.g., L. N. Hansen et al., 2016; Yamauchi & Takei, 2020; also see reviews in Fischer et al., 2020; Karato & Park, 2018; Rychert et al., 2018a, 2018b). In some regions the seismic LAB has been associated with solidi, for example, a relatively dry peridotite solidus in the western U.S. (Golos & Fischer, 2022; Plank & Forsyth, 2016), a hydrated peridotite solidus in subduction zones (e.g., Wang et al., 2020), or a carbonated peridotite solidus beneath the oceans and in subduction zones (e.g., Dasgupta, 2018; Hammouda et al., 2021; Hirschmann, 2010). In Alaska, Rondenay et al.…”