Effects of Composite Rheology on Plate‐Like Behavior in Global‐Scale Mantle Convection

Author:

Arnould Maëlis12ORCID,Rolf Tobias23ORCID,Manjón‐Cabeza Córdoba Antonio245ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Lyon UCBL ENSL UJM CNRS UMR 5276 Laboratoire de Géologie de Lyon ‐ Terre, Planètes, Environnement Lyon France

2. Centre for Earth Evolution and Dynamics Department of Geosciences University of Oslo Blindern Oslo Norway

3. Institute of Geophysics University of Münster Münster Germany

4. Andalusian Earth Sciences Institute University of Granada Granada Spain

5. Department of Earth Sciences University College London London UK

Abstract

AbstractEarth'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.

Funder

Institut national des sciences de l'Univers

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,Geophysics

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