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• We have been talking about minerals primarily in the earth’s crust • What About the rest?? Mantle composition (rheology) dicontinuities Harzburgite (80%olv 20%OPX) lithosphereLherzolite (60%olv 40%OPX, grt) MOHO asthenosphere Pyrolite (lherzolite-like) Upper mantle Olivine b-spinel 410 Pyroxene b-spinel + stishovite 660 Spinel Lower mantle perovskite + periclase Upper Mantle Minerals • Olivine (60%), Pyroxene (30%), Garnet (10%) • Rest is compositionally homogeneous discontinuities • What’s different?? Harzburgite (80%olv 20%OPX) lithosphere Lherzolite (60%olv 40%OPX, grt) MOHO asthenosphere Pyrolite (lherzolite-like) Upper mantle Olivine b-spinel 410 Pyroxene b-spinel + stishovite Lower mantle Spinel perovskite + periclase 660 Upper Mantle Olivine • Olivine – Thought to be about 10-12% Fe in upper mantle • At pressures around the 410-km discontinuity, Fo-rich olivine transforms to a ccp structure called wadsleyite. • Iron rich olivines do not undergo this transformation. At higher pressures, both the Fa-rich olivine and wadsleyite transform to a spinel structure, (Mg,Fe)2SiO4, called ringwoodite. – This occurs when the pressure forces the structure to become as closest-packed as it can get in order to become more dense it must transform to a new phase. Garnet, Pyroxene • As pressure increases Pyroxene Garnet (primarily pyrope) – Increases from 50 to 520 km • Past 520 km, Garnet Ca-perovskite • Past 720 km, more Mg rich Garnets begin to form Mg-perovskite Lower Mantle Minerals • Perovskite ((Mg, Fe)SiO3, Magnesiowüstite: ((Mg,Fe)O), and Stishovite (SiO2) • ~80% Perovskite, ~20% Magnesiowustite, minor stishovite (which doesn’t form if Mg or Fe are around) • At these high pressures, all Si is 6coordinate (SiO6 subunits; Octahedral coordination) Perovskite • (Mg, Fe)SiO3 • As the major mineral in the lower mantle, possibly the most abundant earth material! Do we have any Lower Mantle Minerals?? • • • • NO How do we know they are there? METEORITES!?!?!?! P-S waves tell us something about composition • Nuclear chemistry also tells us something about composition • EXPERIMENTS – simulate P-T see what you get… Core Core • Outer Core – Liquid – made of Iron (Fe) and Nickel (Ni) (about 4%) and some S, Si, and O (enough to make the density less than Fe and Ni alone) – Movement of this liquid is responsible for earth’s magnetic field • Inner Core – Solid, Hexagonally-closest packed Fe and Ni Geodynamo • The inner core spins – what happens when a solid is spun inside a liquid containing ions?? • Generate an electromagnetic field! • The polarity of that field has flopped many times in earth’s history Model of a magnetic reversal taking ~1,000 years… http://www.es.ucsc.edu/~glatz/geodynamo.html • The electromagnetic field also protects the planet from solar sourced ionic particles (solar wind) • The geodynamo is additionally responsible for the position of magnetic north