4.6 Article Proceedings Paper

Plate tectonics on the early Earth: Limitations imposed by strength and buoyancy of subducted lithosphere

Journal

LITHOS
Volume 103, Issue 1-2, Pages 217-235

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.lithos.2007.09.016

Keywords

plate tectonics; Archean; subduction; ultra-high pressure metamorphism

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The tectonic style and viability of modem plate tectonics in the early Earth is still debated. Field observations and theoretical arguments both in favor and against the uniformitarian view of plate tectonics back until the Archean continue to accumulate. Here, we present the first numerical modeling results that address for a hotter Earth the viability of subduction, one of the main requirements for plate tectonics. A hotter mantle has mainly two effects: 1) viscosity is lower, and 2) more melt is produced, which in a plate tectonic setting will lead to a thicker oceanic crust and harzburgite layer. Although compositional buoyancy resulting from these thick crust and harzburgite might be a serious limitation for subduction initiation, our modeling results show that eclogitization significantly relaxes this limitation for a developed, ongoing subduction process. Furthermore, the lower viscosity leads to more frequent slab breakoff, and sometimes to crustal separation from the mantle lithosphere. Unlike earlier propositions, not compositional buoyancy considerations, but this lithospheric weakness could be the principle limitation to the viability of plate tectonics in a hotter Earth. These results suggest a new explanation for the absence of ultrahigh-pressure metamorphism (UHPM) and blueschists in most of the Precambrian: early slabs were not too buoyant, but too weak to provide a mechanism for UHPM and exhumation. (c) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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