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    Delamination and recycling of Archaean crust caused by gravitational instabilities

    225725_225725.pdf (8.695Mb)
    Access Status
    Open access
    Authors
    Johnson, Tim
    Brown, M.
    Kaus, B.
    VanTongeren, J.
    Date
    2014
    Type
    Journal Article
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Citation
    Johnson, T. and Brown, M. and Kaus, B. and VanTongeren, J. 2014. Delamination and recycling of Archaean crust caused by gravitational instabilities. Nature Geoscience. 7: pp. 47-52.
    Source Title
    Nature Geoscience
    DOI
    10.1038/ngeo2019
    ISSN
    1752-0894
    Remarks

    This is a post-peer-review, pre-copyedit version of an article published in Nature Geoscience. The definitive publisher-authenticated version Johnson, T. and Brown, M. and Kaus, B. and VanTongeren, J. 2014. Delamination and recycling of Archaean crust caused by gravitational instabilities. Nature Geoscience. 7: pp. 47-52. is available online at: http://doi.org/10.1038/ngeo2019

    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/31170
    Collection
    • Curtin Research Publications
    Abstract

    Mantle temperatures during the Archaean eon were higher than today. As a consequence, the primary crust formed at the time is thought to have been extensive, thick and magnesium rich, and underlain by a highly residual mantle1. However, the preserved volume of this crust today is low, implying that much of it was recycled back into the mantle2. Furthermore, Archaean crust exposed today is composed mostly of tonalite–trondhjemite–granodiorite, indicative of a hydrated, low-magnesium basalt source3, suggesting that they were not directly generated from a magnesium-rich primary crust. Here we present thermodynamic calculations that indicate that the stable mineral assemblages expected to form at the base of a 45-km-thick, fully hydrated and anhydrous magnesium-rich crust are denser than the underlying, complementary residual mantle. We use two-dimensional geodynamic models to show that the base of magmatically over-thickened magnesium-rich crust, whether fully hydrated or anhydrous, would have been gravitationally unstable at mantle temperatures greater than 1,500–1,550?°C. The dense crust would drip down into the mantle, generating a return flow of asthenospheric mantle that melts to create more primary crust. Continued melting of over-thickened and dripping magnesium-rich crust, combined with fractionation of primary magmas, may have produced the hydrated magnesium-poor basalts necessary to source tonalite–trondhjemite–granodiorite melts. The residues of these processes, with an ultramafic composition, must now reside in the mantle.

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