lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a...

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Lithosphere : mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7 GPa (170–250 km), shallower (ca 100-150km) in off-cratons, and shallower still in oceans (<100 km) Asthenosphere : weak layer underneath the lithosphere, area with pervasive plastic deformation deforming over 10 4 -10 5 a. It is a region with small scale partial melt and is electrically conductive (c.f., lithosphere). LAB : Lithosphere-asthenosphre boundary, a is the Lithosphere: it is not the asthenosp

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Page 1: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 108-109 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7 GPa (170–250 km), shallower (ca 100-150km) in off-cratons, and shallower still in oceans (<100 km)

Asthenosphere: weak layer underneath the lithosphere, area with pervasive plastic deformation deforming over 104-105 a. It is a region with small scale partial melt and is electrically conductive (c.f., lithosphere).

LAB: Lithosphere-asthenosphre boundary, a transition region of shear stress and anisotropic fabric, perhaps a transition between diffusion vs dislocation creep. The transition may or may not be sharp (up to tens of km).

What is the Lithosphere: it is not the asthenosphere

Page 2: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7
Page 3: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Fischer et al (2010, Ann Rev)

lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary (LAB) properties

crustmantle

w/ melt

Page 4: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Eaton et al (2009, Lithos)

Page 5: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Mantle

Crust

Page 6: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Composition of the lithospheric mantleApproaches

geophysics: seismology, gravity, heat flow, tectonics

(rheology, deformation, uplift, erosion)

geochemistry: petrography, elemental, isotopic

Sampling the lithospheric mantleApproaches

geophysics: 103 – 106 meters

geochemistry: 10-3 – 10-6 meters

- 6 to 12 orders of magnitude difference

Page 7: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Why study composition of the CLM?

- Place constraints on the timing and tectonic setting for the formation of continents & their roots

- Examine consequences of the Earth’s secular evolution

- Test models of basaltic source regions

- Characterize the inventory of elements in an Earth reservoir

Page 8: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

LIDChemicalMechanicalThermalSeismological

Tectosphere

Bottom: asthenosphere (LAB)

Top: MOHO (seismic)petrologic break

Oceanic Continental: craton vs off-craton

The different Lithospheresone example

Page 9: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Where are the cratons and off-cratons

Pearson and Witting (2008, GSL)

Page 10: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Where are the cratons and off-cratons

Lee et al (2011, Ann Rev)

Page 11: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Growth of Lithospheric Mantle (LM)

- Mostly linked to crust production

- Different in oceanic vs continental setting

- Oceanic: crustal growth in divergent margin settings, with LM growth via lateral accretion of refractory peridotite, followed by conductive cooling of deeper lithosphere

- Continental: mostly convergent margin tectonic growth, with some intraplate contributions, LM grows by accretion of refractory diapirs

Page 12: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Oceanic & Continental

Crusts

60% of Earth’s surface consists of oceanic crust

Page 13: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Oceanic lithosphere cools, thickens and increases in density away from the ridge

Increasing density of lithosphere with age leads to progressive subsidence (age-depth relationship)

Page 14: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Seafloor subsidence & heatflow reflect progressive thickening of lithosphere with age

D(m) = 2500 +350t1/2

q = 480/t1/2

Depth

Heatflow

Wei and Sandwell 2006 Tectonophysics

Page 15: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Continental Lithospheric MantleCLM growth models

Lee et al (2011, Ann Rev)

Page 16: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Heat production in the Lithosphere

- Heat Producing Elements (HPE): K, Th, U

- Continental Surface heat flow (Q) Craton 40 mW m-2 Off craton 55 mW m-2

- Near surface heat production

- Heat production versus depth

- Concentration of HPE in Lithospheric Mantle?

Page 17: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Earth’s Total Surface Heat Flow

Conductive heat flow measured from bore-hole temperature gradient and conductivity

Surface heat flow 463 TW (1)

472 TW (2)

(1) Jaupart et al (2008) Treatise of Geophys.(2) Davies and Davies (2010) Solid Earth

mW m-2

40,000 data points

Page 18: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

after Jaupart et al 2008 Treatise of Geophysics

Mantle cooling(18±10 TW)

Crust R*(7±3 TW)

Mantle R*(13±4 TW)

Core(9±6 TW)

Earth’s surface heat flow 46 ± 3 (47 ± 2)

(0.4 TW) Tidal dissipationChemical differentiation

*R radiogenic heat

± are 1s.d. estimates

Page 19: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

- linear relation between heat flow and radioactive heat production- characteristic values for tectono-physiographic provinces.

Q = Q0 + Ab

0 2 4 6 8 10 120

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

180

EUS SN B & R

uW m-3

mW

m-2

Birch et al., (1968) (A)

(b)

(Q0)

Page 20: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Q = Q0 + Ab

1 Baltic Shield2 Brazil Coastal3 Central Australia4 EUS Phanerozoic5 EUS Proterozoic6 Fennoscandia7 Maritime8 Piedmont9 Ukraine10 Wyoming11 Yilgarn

Mahesh Thakur & David Blackwell (in press)

Page 21: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Kalihari Slave

Pre

ssur

e (G

Pa)

Lesotho

Kimberley

Letlhakane

Jericho

Lac de Gras

Torrie

Grizzly

Depth (km

)

Best Fit Kalihari

50

100

150

200

250

300

0

2

4

6

8

100 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600

Temperature (oC)Temperature (oC)

Archean lithosphere is thick & cold

From Rudnick & Nyblade, 1999

Page 22: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Lee et al (2011, Ann Rev)

Page 23: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Fischer et al (2010, Ann Rev)

Page 24: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Age of CLM

Lee et al (2011, AnnRev) Pearson and Witting (2008, GSL)

Isotope systems

NO: U-Pb, Sm-Nd, Rb-Sr, Lu-Hf (incompatible element systems)

YES: Re-Os (compatible element systems)

Page 25: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

“Alumina-chron”

Data filter: - No peridotites with less than 0.5 ng/g Os plotted- No samples analyzed by sparging.

Al2O3 (wt. %)

187Os/ 188Os

PUM

J.G. Liu et al., 2009; 2011

TRD (Ga)0.5

2.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

Yangyuan Peridotites, North China Craton

Page 26: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Hannuoba Peridotites,Central Zone:1.9 Ga lithosphere

PUM

0.116

0.120

0.124

0.128

0.132

0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4

2 sigma error

< spot size

Age = 1.94 ± 0.18GaInitial = 0.1155 ± 0.0008

Initial gOs = 0

MSWD = 23

187Re/188Os

187Os/ 188Os

Gao et al., 2002, EPSL

Page 27: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Sm-Nd isotopes do not tell you about the age of the CLM

McDonough (1990, EPSL)

Page 28: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Lithospheric Mantle samples: Oc. vs Cont.

- On-Craton xenoliths - Archean

- Off-Craton xenoliths* - post-Archean

- Massif peridotites - post-Archean

- Abyssal peridotites - Phanerozic

- Oceanic Massifs - Phanerozic

*no compositional distinction in Protoerzoic and Phanerozoc Off-Craton

Page 29: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

*

Mineralogy of the Lithospheric Mantle

Olivine

ClinopyroxeneOrthopyx

mafic

ultramafic

Page 30: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Mafic assemblages in the CLM

Pyroxenites versus Eclogites

- Archean roots have distinctive assemblages

- Diversity of d18O values (evidence for recycling)

- Probably ~5% by mass in CLM (…squishy #)

- Which ones are lower crustal vs those resident in the CLM? …. what is the Moho?

Mafic lithologies are there, but what to do with them? – they do not dominant CLM chemical budget

Page 31: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Significant findings:

- Cratonic roots are melt residues of circa ≤ 30% depletion

- Off-cratonic regions are dominantly post-Archean, with no chemical distinction in suites over the last 2.5 Ga

- Melt depletion occurred at <3 GPa in all regions

- Re-Os system yield robust ages for the CLM that can be correlated with the ages of local surface rocks

- No evidence for vertical compositional gradients in the CLM

- CLM growth during crustal genesis via residual diapiric emplacement (conductive cooling additions – negligible)

Page 32: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Spinel- facies mineralogy

(<70 km)

Page 33: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Garnet- facies mineralogy

(>70 km)

Page 34: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Lee et al (2011, AnnRev)

Olivine is important

Page 35: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Massif

Off-craton

On-craton dunite

Prim. Mantle

meltingtrend

Secular decrease in the ambient mantle temperature – resulted in lower degrees of depletion in the CLM

Page 36: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Lee et al (2011, AnnRev)

Mafic Lithologies

pyroxenites eclogites

Page 37: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Median composition of the CLM

OPX-enrichment is secondary: melt addition or cumulate control

* In Kaapvaal, less so Siberian, much less elsewhere is the CLM OPX-enriched

*

- System is modeled w/ differ ratios of “basalt” + residue = PM- Fe-depletion @ hi melt depletion most bouyant residues

Page 38: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Composition of the CLM: trace elements

Treatment of data:non-gaussian distributionaverage (not a good measure) median (better) log-normal avg (better, will equal mode)

Sampling biases:fraction of ultramafic to mafic analytical (below detection (reported?), not measured)geological samplingsampling by geologistsinfiltration by host magma, weathering of xenoliths

Is it an enriched mantle region?- mantle metasomatism?- source of basalts?

Page 39: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Characterization of elements in peridotites

Page 40: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Compatible to mildly incompatible elements

Di = Ci in residue/Ci in melt

Di > 1, compatible element

Di <1, incompatible element

Page 41: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Highly incompatible elements

Page 42: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7
Page 43: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

K, in Peridotites:Lithospheric Mantle

Heat Producing Elements

Page 44: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

McDonough (1990, EPSL)

Page 45: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

REE composition of CLM (median values only)

LREE-enrichmentnot strong

MREE ~ Primitive Mantle

Cratons are strongly HREE-depleted

Most depleted is most enriched – not explained feature

Primitive mantle normalized

Page 46: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

McDonough (2000, EPSL)

Page 47: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

Incompatible elements in CLM (median values only)

K-depletion - low % partial melt metasom.

~ Primitive Mantle

We can build a complete picture of elements in CLM!

Primitive mantle normalized

Page 48: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

SiFeMn

MgNiIr

YbCaSc

NdZrTi

ThNbLa

AlGaRe

Incompatible element Budget in CLM

Places limits on heat production in CLM

degree of depletionConstrained from Ca, Al & Ti

Integration of major, minor and trace elements

compatibles, never >factor 2 times PM

Primitive mantle normalized

two-stage production of composition

Page 49: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

ReservoirThickness

(km)Mass (1022 kg)

Mass % U (ng/g)±U

(ng/g) %

U (%)

Continental crust 40 2.17 0.54% 1300 30% 35%

Cont. Lithospheric Mantle

~160 8 2% 30 50% 3%

Mantle (all else down there)

2695 395 98% 13 20% 62%

Silicate Earth 2895 404.3 100% 20 -- 100%

Attributes of Continental Crust and Lithospheric Mantle

Page 50: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

For cratonic & off-cratonic regions

- melt depletion is a continuum with no significant differences in time or space (also cannot identify regional distinctions*)

- OPX-enrichment is an overprinted feature found in some cratons and is dominant in the Kaapvaal cratonic and immediate off-cratonic area

- residual peridotites were produced at <3 GPa and have been overprinted by low degree undersaturated melts

- CLM is not a significant chemical reservoir, for the Earth’s budget its compositional contribution = mass contribution

(*Large scale perspective, regional features not highlighted)

Page 51: Lithosphere: mechanical boundary layer, dry-mostly, stable for 10 8 -10 9 a, possessing a steady-state conductive geotherm with base in cratons at 4-7

For cratonic & off-cratonic regions

- elements show a non-normal log distribution

- median composition characterizes the abundances of the moderately to highly incompatible trace elements in the Lithospheric Mantle (Oceanic and Cont.)

- absence of chemical signature in CLM for growth in convergent margin settings

- the absence of this signature does not mean the CLM was not developed dominantly in such a tectonic setting

- Stability of CLM…. this is another lecture, but let’s discuss!

Thank you.