4.5 Article

Seismic tomography, surface uplift, and the breakup of Gondwanaland: Integrating mantle convection backwards in time

Journal

GEOCHEMISTRY GEOPHYSICS GEOSYSTEMS
Volume 4, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2001GC000299

Keywords

time-dependent convection; mantle structure; dynamic topography; continental uplift; Gondwanaland breakup; African superswell; tectonophysics : dynamics, convection currents and mantle plumes; tectonophysics : continental tectonics-extensional (0905); tectonophysics : evolution of the earth : tomography; information related to geographic region : Africa

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[1] Mantle density heterogeneities, imaged using seismic tomography, contain information about time-dependent mantle flow and mantle structures that existed in the past. We model the history of mantle flow using a tomographic image of the mantle beneath southern Africa as an initial condition while reversing the direction of flow and analytically incorporating cooling plates as a boundary condition. If the resulting (backwards integrated) model for structures is used as a starting point for a forwards convection model, today's mantle can be adequately reconstructed if we do not integrate backwards more than than about 5075 Ma. Flow can also be reliably reversed through the Mesozoic, but only if instability of the lower boundary layer can be suppressed. Our model predicts that the large seismically-slow and presumably hot structure beneath southern Africa produced 500-700 m of dynamic topography throughout the Cenozoic. Since 30 Ma, uplift has moved from eastern to southern Africa, where uplift rates are similar to10 m/Myr, consistent with observations. During the Mesozoic, the modeled topographic high is situated near Gondwanaland rifting, raising the possibility that this buoyant structure may have been involved with this breakup.

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