4.3 Article

On subducting slab entrainment of buoyant asthenosphere

Journal

TERRA NOVA
Volume 19, Issue 3, Pages 167-173

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-3121.2007.00737.x

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Laboratory and numerical experiments and boundary layer analysis of the entrainment of buoyant asthenosphere by subducting oceanic lithosphere implies that slab entrainment is likely to be relatively inefficient at removing a buoyant and lower viscosity asthenosphere layer. Asthenosphere would instead be mostly removed by accretion into and eventual subduction of the overlying oceanic lithosphere. The lower (hot) side of a subducting slab entrains by the formation of a similar to 10-30 km-thick downdragged layer, whose thickness depends upon the subduction rate and the density contrast and viscosity of the asthenosphere, while the upper (cold) side of the slab may entrain as much by thermal 'freezing' onto the slab as by mechanical downdragging. This analysis also implies that proper treatment of slab entrainment in future numerical mantle flow experiments will require the resolution of similar to 10-30 km-thick entrainment boundary layers.

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