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Geodynamics Causes and consequences of plate motion Quantitative geodynamics • • • • Forces acting on the plates Cooling plate model of the oceanic lithosphere Stresses in the plates Mantle convection • • • • • Thermal convection Rayleigh number Convection in the Earth’s mantle Geochemical evidence Geophysical evidence Heat transfer • Heat provides the energy that drives all the tectonic activity. • Plate tectonics is ultimately driven by the transfer of heat from the core and mantle to the Earth’s surface • Three main mechanisms of heat transfer – Conduction – Convection – Radiation Rappel (1) Rappel (2) Rappel (3) Heat flow Example of terrestrial heat flow measurement Example of terrestrial heat flow measurement Kelvin and the age of the Earth Cooling of a conductive Earth Continental heat flow Crustal heat generation by radioactivity Crustal radioactivity • • • • • Heat production (μW m-3) Depends on composition Crustal rocks (0.2 -> 3 μW m-3 ) Scale:heat production x thickness = heat flux “Average crust” = 0.65-0.95 μW m-3 Oceanic heat flow Surprise! Sea floor spreading => Oceanic lithosphere is cooling Velocity scale for heat transport? Compilation of all oceanic heat flux data, grouped by age Heat flow should decrease with age! Heat flow data are noisy because of hydrothermal convection In sedimented areas, fractures are sealed, the heat flux follows the cooling model Measurements on very young sea floor near the JdF ridge. Away from outcropping basement, follows t-1/2 Measurements in selected areas for all ages Follow exactly t-1/2 for sea floor ages younger than 80My Heat flux does not decrease any more for ages older than 80My Is there a better way to see that plate is cooling? Sea floor bathymetry increases because density changes as lithosphere cools down? Bathymetry fits the cooling plate model -> 80Ma Bathymetry vs age But plates can be rejuvenated when they pass over a hot spot What about ages > 80 Ma Global heat flow map Energy Budget of the earth • Continental heat loss 14TW • Oceanic heat loss = 32TW (including hotspots) • Total = 46TW • Crustal heat generation 6-8TW • Mantle heat generation 12-14TW • Cooling of the core 614TW • Cooling of the mantle must provide ~ 1022TW (16TW = rate of cooling ~100 K Gy-1) Stresses acting on the plates • Plate boundaries • Ridge push • Slab pull • Transforms • Viscous drag at the base of the plate Ridge push Slab pull Transforms. San Andreas thermal paradox • Friction along the fault produces heat. • Heat flux measurements do not show much heating along San Andreas fault • For mid-oceanic ridges transforms, plate is hot and ductile at shallow depth. Viscous drag Summary • Slab pull is the dominant force acting on plates • Ridge push may be important on plates that include no subduction zone • Transforms are probably negligible in first order • Viscous drag maybe variable • Internal stresses are not always negligible Stress indicators • To determine the tectonic stress orientation different types of stress indicators are used in the World Stress Map. They are grouped into four categories: – earthquake focal mechanisms – well bore breakouts and drilling induced fractures – in-situ stress measurements (overcoring, hydraulic fracturing, borehole slotter – young geologic data (from fault slip analysis and volcanic vent alignments Intraplate stresses Convection in the Earth • Early model proposed by Holmes • Radioactivity in continents cause heating of mantle and trigger convection and continental breakup Early plate tectonics models? Debate on the organization of convection What drives the plates? • Convection in the mantle, but many questions are open: – How is convection organized? – Role of 670km discontinuity – One or two reservoirs? – Role of plates in mantle convection – Hot spots, plumes, and convection • Geophysics 1 – Geochemistry 1 Well organized cells? • It was first thought that mantle convection is organized. • Ridge = ascending current • Trench = descending current • Geometry of plates shows that it must be different! Or is it more complicated? With plumes feeding the asthenosphere? Perhaps like this? like a lava lamp! Rayleigh-Benard convection • Fluid heated from below • Important forces? • Gravity • Friction Necessary (but not sufficient) condition • Temperature gradient must be super adiabatic • Adiabatic gradient in mantle is ~ 0.5 K km-1 • It is achieved but… • Condition is not sufficient! Forces acting on fluid • Ratio of 2 forces is a dimensionless number • Reynolds number (Re) is extremely small for Earth’s mantle < 10-15. Inertia is unimportant. • Rayleigh number (Ra) is the ratio of gravity forces that maintain movement and frictional forces that oppose it • If Ra is large, gravity rules and convection occurs. Another definition of Rayleigh number • Ra = τconduction/τconvection • If Ra is large, cooling by convection is much more efficient than by convection • τconduction= L2/κ for mantle • Τconvection = L / v (crude estimate). Need to use Ra definition Critical Rayleigh number • Convection possible when Ra > critical value • Depending on wavelength, convection occurs or does not. • Critical value depends on geometry • On the order 1,000 Viscosity of the mantle Mantle viscosity • Order of time constant can be obtained from dimensional analysis. • It must depend on viscosity and pressure differences in mantle • Viscosity = Pa s • Pressure = Pa • Time = viscosity/Pressure • Exact form requires to write down the equations. Rayleigh number for the mantle affects the form of the convection Increasing Ra 670 km discontinuity? Isotope tracing • Crust is enriched in Rb relative to mantle • Crust is depleted in Sm • Sr87/Sr86 increases faster in crust than mantle • Nd143/Nd144 increases faster in mantle • Negative correlation • Model age (age of extraction from mantle reservoir) What about mantle convection? Isotope geochemistry shows different mantle sources for magmas • MORBs are depleted relative to OIBs (source of hot spot in lower mantle?) • OIBs are very heterogeneous • More isotopic systems = more reservoirs With Pb isotopes, the mantle contains many reservoirs Thank God, we have geophysics! Seismic tomography shows lateral variations in velocity (due to temperature?) • Interpretation of seismic tomography in the mantle is that velocity differences are mostly due to temperature differences • For the same pressure and composition, higher velocities imply colder rocks Tomographic images of subduction zones show the slab penetrating in the lower mantle One alternative model? • Lava lamp model was popular because it allows two reservoirs not separated by 670 discontinuity • It solves the problem of missing heat sources (the MORB source is too depleted in radioelements). • Thermal and compositional effects cancel, so it cannot be tested Conclusions • Geochemistry suggests mantle not very well mixed • Seismic tomography shows 670km discontinuity is not a barrier for convection and mantle may be mixed • Models of mantle convection • Avalanches? Intermittent mixing. (see also some of the tomography). • Lava lamp type of model? Summary • Stress at plate boundaries. • slab pull is the largest • large enough to drive plate motion • Mantle Ra >>> critical • Lithosphere is thermal boundary layer (conduction vs convection in the mantle) • Geochemistry sees compositional heterogeneities • Geophysics sees mostly temperature differences • Slabs penetrate into lower mantle