Search results for "Mantle convection"

showing 10 items of 11 documents

The Impact of a Very Weak and Thin Upper Asthenosphere on Subduction Motions

2019

Recent geophysical observations report the presence of a very weak and thin upper asthenosphere underneath subducting oceanic plates at convergent margins. Along these margins, trench migrations are significantly slower than plate convergence rates. We use numerical models to assess the role of a weak upper asthenospheric layer on plate and trench motions. We show that the presence of this layer alone can enhance an advancing trend for the motion of the plate and hamper trench retreat. This mechanism provides a novel and alternative explanation for the slow rates of trench migration and fast-moving plates observed globally at natural subduction zones.

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesSubductionNumerical models010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesGeophysicsMantle convectionAsthenosphereOceanic crustLithosphereTransition zoneTrenchGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesPetrologyGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesGeophysical Research Letters
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Present-day uplift of the European Alps: Evaluating mechanisms and models of their relative contributions

2019

Abstract Recent measurements of surface vertical displacements of the European Alps show a correlation between vertical velocities and topographic features, with widespread uplift at rates of up to ~2–2.5 mm/a in the North-Western and Central Alps, and ~1 mm/a across a continuous region from the Eastern to the South-Western Alps. Such a rock uplift rate pattern is at odds with the horizontal velocity field, characterized by shortening and crustal thickening in the Eastern Alps and very limited deformation in the Central and Western Alps. Proposed mechanisms of rock uplift rate include isostatic response to the last deglaciation, long-term erosion, detachment of the Western Alpine slab, as w…

European Alps Vertical displacement rate Deglaciation Erosion Lithospheric structural changes Mantle flowVertical displacement rate010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesEuropean AlpPresent day010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesPaleontologyLithospheric structural changesMantle convectionLithosphereDeglaciationddc:550ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS0105 earth and related environmental sciences[SDU.STU.TE]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/TectonicsDeglaciationMantle flow15. Life on landLithospheric structural changeTectonics13. Climate actionErosionSlabGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesUpwellingEuropean AlpsEarth and Planetary Sciences (all)Surface massGeology
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Constraining lithospheric flow.

2016

The motion of Earth's tectonic plates—the lithosphere—is driven by the subduction of relatively cold and dense oceanic plates into the mantle. The resulting forces drive the motions of continental plates, but the manner in which this happens depends on the effective viscosities of the lithosphere and mantle. On page 1515 of this issue, Liu and Hasterok ( 1 ) discuss a novel method of constraining viscosities of the lithosphere from geophysical data.

Gene FlowMultidisciplinary010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesSubductionGeophysics010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesMantle (geology)Plate tectonicsTectonicsMantle convectionLithosphereOceanic crustHumansGeologyBlood Flow Velocity0105 earth and related environmental sciencesScience (New York, N.Y.)
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Effects of Rayleigh number length thickness of continent on time of mantle flow reversal

1998

Abstract Numerical experiments are carried out to study the effects of continents on the structure of thermal convection in the mantle. The mantle is modelled by a viscous fluid occupying a horizontally extended rectangular 2-D region of aspect ratio 10:1. Continents are treated as thick rigid heat-conducting plates placed in the mantle, with free-slip and with no-slip conditions. Continents restrict the heat release from the underlying mantle; the mantle material heats up and becomes lighter; as a result, a hot upwelling flow replaces downwelling. We calculate the characteristic time τ of this restructuring for various values of model parameters and obtain analytical approximations for τ a…

GeophysicsMantle wedgeMantle convectionConvective heat transferDownwellingRayleigh numberGeophysicsViscous liquidGeologyMantle (geology)Earth-Surface ProcessesEarth's internal heat budgetJournal of Geodynamics
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Hotspot distribution, gravity, mantle tomography: evidence for plumes

1999

Abstract Thermal convection is the motor of Earth dynamics and therefore is the link between plate motions, hotspots, seismic velocity variations in the mantle, and anomalies of the gravity field. Small scale mantle anomalies, such as plumes, do, however, generally escape detection by tomographic methods. It is attempted to approach the problem of detection in a somewhat statistical manner. Correlations are sought between spherical harmonic expansions of the fields under study: the hotspot distribution, mantle velocity variations, gravity, heat flow. Using spherical harmonic representations of global fields implies integration and averaging over the whole globe. Thus, although relationships…

Mantle wedgeGeophysicsMantle (geology)Physics::GeophysicsPlumePlate tectonicsGeophysicsGravitational fieldMantle convectionDownwellingHotspot (geology)GeologySeismologyEarth-Surface ProcessesJournal of Geodynamics
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Melt evolution beneath a rifted craton edge: 40Ar/39Ar geochronology and Sr-Nd-Hf-Pb isotope systematics of primitive alkaline basalts and lamprophyr…

2016

A new high-precision Ar-40/Ar-39 anorthoclase feldspar age of 176.7 +/- 0.5 Ma (2-sigma) reveals that small-volume alkaline basaltic magmatism occurred at the rifted SW margin of the Baltic Shield in Scania (southern Sweden), at a time of global plate reorganization associated with the inception of Pangea supercontinent break-up. Our combined elemental and Sr-Nd-Hf-Pb isotope dataset for representative basanite and nephelinite samples (>8 wt.% MgO) from 16 subvolcanic necks of the 30 by 40 km large Jurassic volcanic field suggests magma derivation from a moderately depleted mantle source (Sr-87/(86)Sri = 0.7034-0.7048; epsilon Nd-i = +4.4 to +5.2; epsilon Hf-i = +4.7 to +8.1; Pb-206/(204)Pb…

PeridotiteBasaltIncompatible elementgeographygeography.geographical_feature_category010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesGeochemistryPartial melting010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesMantle (geology)CratonMantle convectionGeochemistry and PetrologyBaltic ShieldGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciences
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Traces of ancient mafic layers in the Tethys oceanic mantle

2014

Abstract Oceanic basalts are formed by melting of a chemically and isotopically heterogeneous mantle source. The oceanic mantle probably resembles a marble cake containing layers of mafic rock – perhaps recycled ocean crust – stored in the mantle for >1 billion years. Many questions about the nature and distribution of these mantle heterogeneities remain. Here we show that lithological and isotopic traces of ancient mafic layers can still be seen in mantle rocks that have melted to form oceanic crust at a spreading centre in the Tethys Ocean. We have found centimetre-scale heterogeneity in initial osmium isotope ratios in mantle rocks from the Pindos Ophiolite. Deformed pyroxenite layers ha…

PeridotiteBasaltMantle wedgeGeochemistryOphioliteMantle (geology)GeophysicsMantle convectionSpace and Planetary ScienceGeochemistry and PetrologyOceanic crustTransition zoneEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)GeologyEarth and Planetary Science Letters
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Self-consistent subduction initiation induced by mantle flow

2015

Mantle circulation in planets with strongly temperature-dependent viscosity results in stagnant-lid convection. It is fundamental to understand how this stagnant-lid regime can change into a plate-like convection regime as on the present-day Earth. Here, we use 2D numerical models to study subduction initiation from an initial stagnant lid with laboratory-consistent parameters and without pre-existing weak zones or kinematic boundary conditions. Our results show that subduction can be initiated dynamically as a result of a thermal localization instability. The lithosphere may deform in a stagnant-lid mode, an un-necking mode, a symmetric-subduction mode or an asymmetric-subduction mode. The…

Physics::Fluid DynamicsConvectionPlate tectonicsMantle convectionSubductionLithosphereThermalGeologyGeophysicsInstabilityMantle (geology)GeologyPhysics::GeophysicsTerra Nova
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Slab-triggered wet upwellings produce large volumes of melt: Insights into the destruction of the North China Craton

2018

Abstract Cratons have remained stable for billions of years, despite of ongoing mantle convection and plate tectonics. The North China Craton (NCC), however, is abnormal, as it has experienced a destruction event during the Mesozoic and Cenozoic which was accompanied by extensive magmatism. Several lines of evidence suggest that the (Paleo-)Pacific plate played an important role in this event. Yet, the geodynamic link between subduction and craton destruction remains poorly understood, and it is unclear why there is no systematic spatial and temporal variation of magmatism related to subduction. Here, we perform 2-D petrological-thermomechanical simulations to investigate the influence of s…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_category010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesSubductionEarth scienceGeochemistry010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesMantle (geology)CratonPlate tectonicsGeophysicsMantle convectionLithosphereAsthenosphereTransition zoneGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface ProcessesTectonophysics
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A free plate surface and weak oceanic crust produce single-sided subduction on Earth

2012

[1] Earth’s lithosphere is characterized by the relative movement of almost rigid plates as part of global mantle convection. Subduction zones on present-day Earth are strongly asymmetric features composed of an overriding plate above a subducting plate that sinks into the mantle. While global self-consistent numerical models of mantle convection have reproduced some aspects of plate tectonics, the assumptions behind these models do not allow for realistic single-sided subduction. Here we demonstrate that the asymmetry of subduction results from two major features of terrestrial plates: (1) the presence of a free deformable upper surface and (2) the presence of weak hydrated crust atop subd…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_category010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesVolcanic arcSubductionMid-ocean ridgeGeophysics010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesPlate tectonicsGeophysicsMantle convectionBack-arc basinLithosphereGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesConvergent boundaryGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesGeophysical Research Letters
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