Densities of liquid silicates at high pressures
Abstract
Densities of molten silicates at high pressures (up to approximately 230 kilobars) have been measured for the first time with shock-wave techniques. For a model basaltic composition (36 mole percent anorthite and 64 mole percent diopside), a bulk modulus Ks of approximately 230 kilobars and a pressure derivative (dKs/dP) of approximately 4 were derived. Some implications of these results are as follows: (i) basic to ultrabasic melts become denser than olivine- and pyroxene-rich host mantle at pressures of 60 to 100 kilobars; (ii) there is a maximum depth from which basaltic melt can rise within terrestrial planetary interiors; (iii) the slopes of silicate solidi (dTm/dP), where Tm is the temperature may become less steep at high pressures; and (iv) enriched mantle reservoirs may have developed by downward segregation of melt early in earth history.
- Publication:
-
Science
- Pub Date:
- November 1984
- DOI:
- 10.1126/science.226.4678.1071
- Bibcode:
- 1984Sci...226.1071R
- Keywords:
-
- Density Measurement;
- Earth Planetary Structure;
- Liquid Phases;
- Mineralogy;
- Silicates;
- Basalt;
- Earth Mantle;
- High Pressure;
- Propagation Velocity;
- Shock Wave Propagation;
- Lunar and Planetary Exploration