Repository logo
 

Effects of Heat-Producing Elements on the Stability of Deep Mantle Thermochemical Piles

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Citron, RI 
Lourenço, DL 
Wilson, AJ 
Grima, AG 
Wipperfurth, SA 

Abstract

©2020. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved. Geochemical observations of ocean island and mid-ocean ridge basalts suggest that abundances of heat-producing elements (HPEs: U, Th, and K) vary within the mantle. Combined with bulk silicate Earth models and constraints on the Earth's heat budget, these observations suggest the presence of a more enriched (potentially deep and undepleted) reservoir in the mantle. Such a reservoir may be related to seismically observed deep mantle structures known as large low shear velocity provinces (LLSVPs). LLSVPs might represent thermochemical piles of an intrinsically denser composition, and many studies have shown such piles to remain stable over hundreds of Myr or longer. However, few studies have examined if thermochemical piles can remain stable if they are enriched in HPEs, a necessary condition for them to constitute an enriched HPE reservoir. We conduct a suite of mantle convection simulations to examine the effect of HPE enrichment up to 25× the ambient mantle on pile stability. Model results are evaluated against present-day pile morphology and tested for resulting seismic signatures using self-consistent potential pile compositions. We find that stable piles can form from an initial basal layer of dense material even if the layer is enriched in HPEs, depending on the density of the layer and degree of HPE enrichment, with denser basal layers requiring increased HPE enrichment to form pile-like morphology instead of a stable layer. Thermochemical piles or LLSVPs may therefore constitute an enriched reservoir in the deep mantle.

Description

Keywords

deep mantle, LLSVPs, thermochemical piles, heat-producing elements, mantle heterogeneity, primordial reservoirs

Journal Title

Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1525-2027
1525-2027

Volume Title

21

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Rights

All rights reserved
Sponsorship
European Research Council (804071)