Water-induced convection in the Earth's mantle transition zone
Abstract
Water enters the Earth's mantle by subduction of oceanic lithosphere. Most of this water immediately returns to the atmosphere through arc volcanism, but a part of it is expected as deep as the mantle transition zone (410-660 km depth). There, slabs can be deflected and linger before sinking into the lower mantle. Because it lowers the density and viscosity of the transition zone minerals (i.e., wadsleyite and ringwoodite), water is likely to affect the dynamics of the transition zone mantle overlying stagnant slabs. The consequences of water exchange between a floating slab and the transition zone are investigated. In particular, we focus on the possible onset of small-scale convection despite the adverse thermal gradient (i.e., mantle is cooled from below by the slab). The competition between thermal and hydrous effects on the density and thus on the convective stability of the top layer of the slab is examined numerically, including water-dependent density and viscosity and temperature-dependent water solubility. For plausible initial water content in a slab (≥0.5 wt %), an episode of convection is likely to occur after a relatively short time delay (5-20 Ma) after the slab enters the transition zone. However, water induced rheological weakening is seen to be a controlling parameter for the onset time of convection. Moreover, small-scale convection above a stagnant slab greatly enhances the rate of slab dehydration. Small-scale convection also facilitates heating of the slab, which in itself may prolong the residence time of the slab in the transition zone.
- Publication:
-
Journal of Geophysical Research (Solid Earth)
- Pub Date:
- January 2009
- DOI:
- 10.1029/2008JB005734
- Bibcode:
- 2009JGRB..114.1205R
- Keywords:
-
- Tectonophysics: Dynamics of lithosphere and mantle: general (1213);
- Computational Geophysics: Numerical solutions (4255);
- Geochemistry: Thermodynamics (0766;
- 3611;
- 8411);
- Geochemistry: Geochemical cycles (0330);
- Marine Geology and Geophysics: Subduction zone processes (1031;
- 3613;
- 8170;
- 8413);
- water;
- hydrogen;
- stagnant slab;
- convection;
- slab dehydration