Abstract
GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS,
VOL. 35,
L20308,
5 PP., 2008
doi:10.1029/2008GL035419
Effects of compositional and rheological stratifications on small-scale convection under the oceans: Implications for the thickness of oceanic lithosphere and seafloor flattening
Group Dynamics of the Lithosphere, Institute of Earth Sciences “J. Almera,” CSIC, Barcelona, Spain
Group Dynamics of the Lithosphere, Institute of Earth Sciences “J. Almera,” CSIC, Barcelona, Spain
Group Dynamics of the Lithosphere, Institute of Earth Sciences “J. Almera,” CSIC, Barcelona, Spain
Pressure-release melting at mid-ocean ridges generate compositional and rheological layering in the oceanic mantle that may
control the evolution of the oceanic lithosphere. We use dynamic models coupled with melting and petrological models to explore
1) the influence of this layering on the development of small-scale convection under the oceans, 2) its role in determining
the thickness of oceanic lithosphere, and 3) its feasibility as responsible for the deviations of seafloor and surface heat
flow from predictions by conductive models in mature oceanic lithosphere. Here we show that the existence of small-scale convection
is entirely compatible with experimental creep parameters and flow laws, and that the viscosity stratification due to melt
extraction (i.e., H2O removal) is the main factor controlling the plate's thermal evolution, its asymptotic thickness, and the flattening of seafloor
and surface heat flow at ages
70 Ma. The effects of Al-rich phase transitions and compositional layering are minor.
Received 21 July 2008; accepted 18 September 2008; published 24 October 2008.
Citation: (2008), Effects of compositional and rheological stratifications on small-scale convection under the oceans: Implications for the thickness of oceanic lithosphere and seafloor flattening, Geophys. Res. Lett., 35, L20308, doi:10.1029/2008GL035419.
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