Effects of Composite Rheology on Plate-Like Behavior in Global-Scale Mantle Convection
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Wiley
Date
2023-08-12Referencia bibliográfica
Arnould, M., Rolf, T., & Manjón-Cabeza Córdoba, A. (2023). Effects of composite rheology on plate-like behavior in global-scale mantle convection. Geophysical Research Letters, 50, e2023GL104146. [https://doi. org/10.1029/2023GL104146]
Sponsorship
Norwegian Research Council funding to the Centre for Earth Evolution and Dynamics (223272) and to TR (PLATONICS, 276032); CNRSINSU- PNP and UCBL-BQR fundings; Computations were performed on Stallo and Saga Uninett Sigma2 facilities (nn9010k, ns9010k)Abstract
Earth's upper mantle rheology controls lithosphere-asthenosphere coupling and thus surface
tectonics. Rock deformation experiments and seismic anisotropy measurements indicate that composite
rheology (co-existing diffusion and dislocation creep) occurs in the Earth's uppermost mantle, potentially
affecting convection and surface tectonics. Here, we investigate how the spatio-temporal distribution of
dislocation creep in an otherwise diffusion-creep-controlled mantle impacts the planform of convection
and the planetary tectonic regime as a function of the lithospheric yield strength in numerical models of
mantle convection self-generating plate-like tectonics. The low upper-mantle viscosities caused by zones of
substantial dislocation creep produce contrasting effects on surface dynamics. For strong lithosphere (yield
strength > 35 MPa), the large lithosphere-asthenosphere viscosity contrasts promote stagnant-lid convection.
In contrast, the increase of upper mantle convective vigor enhances plate mobility for lithospheric strength
<35 MPa. For the here-used model assumptions, composite rheology does not facilitate the onset of plate-like
behavior at large lithospheric strength.