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Free Access to Full Article
REVIEWS OF GEOPHYSICS,
VOL. 31, NO. 3,
PAGES 267–280,
1993
Heat Flow from the Earth's Interior: Analysis of the Global Data Set
Henry N. Pollack
Department of Geological Sciences, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Suzanne J. Hurter
Department of Geological Sciences, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Jeffrey R. Johnson
Department of Geological Sciences, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Abstract
We present a new estimate of the Earth’s heat loss based on a new global compilation of heat flow measurements comprising
24,774 observations at 20,201 sites. On a 5° × 5° grid, the observations cover 62% of the Earth’s surface. Empirical estimators,
referenced to geological map units and derived from the observations, enable heat flow to be estimated in areas without measurements.
Corrections for the effects of hydrothermal circulation in the oceanic crust compensate for the advected heat undetected in
measurements of the conductive heat flux. The mean heat flows of continents and oceans are 65 and 101 mW m−2, respectively, which when areally weighted yield a global mean of 87 mW m−2 and a global heat loss of 44.2 × 1012 W, an increase of some 4-8% over earlier estimates. More than half of the Earth’s heat loss comes from Cenozoic oceanic lithosphere.
A spherical harmonic analysis of the global heat flow field reveals strong sectoral components and lesser zonal strength.
The spectrum principally reflects the geographic distribution of the ocean ridge system. The rate at which the heat flow spectrum
loses strength with increasing harmonic degree is similar to the decline in spectral strength exhibited by the Earth’s topography.
The spectra of the gravitational and magnetic fields fall off much more steeply, consistent with field sources in the lower
mantle and core, respectively. Families of continental and oceanic conductive geotherms indicate the range of temperatures
existing in the lithosphere under various surface heat flow conditions. The heat flow field is very well correlated with the
seismic shear wave velocity distribution near the top of the upper mantle.
Free Access to Full Article
Citation: Pollack, H. N., S. J. Hurter, and J. R. Johnson
(1993),
Heat Flow from the Earth's Interior: Analysis of the Global Data Set,
Rev. Geophys.,
31(3),
267–280.
Copyright 1993 by the American Geophysical Union.
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