4.7 Article

Longitude: Linking Earth's ancient surface to its deep interior

Journal

EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
Volume 276, Issue 3-4, Pages 273-282

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.epsl.2008.09.026

Keywords

longitude; mantle frame; palaeomagnetism; true polar wander; large low shear velocity provinces; Large Igneous Provinces; core mantle boundary

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Earth scientists have had no direct way of calculating longitudes for times before those of the oldest hotspot track eruption sites in the Cretaceous (similar to 130 Myr ago). For earlier times palaeomagnetic data constrain only ancient latitudes and continental rotations. We have recently devised a hybrid plate motion reference frame that permits the calculation of longitude, back to Pangean assembly at similar to 320 Ma. This reference frame, here corrected for True Polar Wander (TPW), places most reconstructed Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs) of the past 300 Myr radially above the edges of the Large Low Shear wave Velocity Provinces (LLSVPs) in Earth's lowermost mantle. This remarkable correlation between surface and deep mantle features, Which is also discernible for all hotspots with a deep-plume origin, provides a new Way Of reconstructing the original positions of LIP sites, and therefore the position of continents whose longitudes have hitherto been unknown. We place the 258 Ma Emeishan LIP eruption of South China at 4 degrees N and 140 degrees E, in that way constraining the width and the geometry of the Palaeotethys Ocean during the Late Permian. If LLSVI's have remained stable for even longer and TPW has been small, we can, under these assumptions, also restore Siberia and Gondwana longitudinally for Lite Devonian (similar to 360 Ma) and Late Cambrian (similar to 510 Ma) times. (C) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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