Journal
EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
Volume 594, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.epsl.2022.117751
Keywords
Martian interior; subduction; eclogite; phase equilibrium; plate tectonics
Categories
Funding
- Honeywell International Inc.
- U.S. Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration [DE-NA0003525]
- Woman in STEM award from UNM
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Mars lacks ongoing tectonic activities due to the smaller density contrast between its crustal slab and mantle compared to Earth. High pressure-temperature experiments on Martian basalts reveal geochemical evolution and suggest that sustained buoyancy-driven subduction of thin slabs was unlikely in early Martian history. Further experiments exploring wider composition and pressure-temperature ranges are needed to fully understand the tectonic history of Mars.
Mars lacks ongoing tectonic activities such as volcanism and mountain-building processes. Modern plate tectonic movements on the Earth's surface are driven primarily by the descent of subducted slabs into the mantle. Slab crust made of dense eclogite metamorphosed from the Mid-Ocean Ridge Basalt provides an important driving force for slab subduction. Thus, mantle convection inside Mars can be hindered if the density contrast between Martian slab crust and the ambient Martian mantle is sufficiently smaller than that of Earth. To evaluate this hypothesis, we carried out high pressure-temperature phase equilibrium experiments on three different Martian basalts: Yamato 980459, NWA 8159, and GUSEV basalt (Humphrey). The GUSEV basalt and NWA 8159 undergo partial or complete melting along the Martian areotherm due to their high Fe content, suggesting that both compositions are geochemically evolved. Yamato 980459, the nearly primitive Martian basalt, on the other hand, would transform to a low-density eclogite at a depth of & SIM;250 km. The density contrast between a Martian crustal slab made of Yamato 980459, and the ambient Martian mantle is much smaller than that for Earth's mantle. Calculated slab sinking torques and velocities further suggest that sustained buoyancy-driven subduction of thin slabs was unlikely early in Martian history. Additional experiments exploring wider composition and pressure-temperature ranges are needed to fully understand the consequences of Martian mantle compositions and cooling history for the tectonic history of Mars. (c) 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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