4.7 Article

Growing primordial continental crust self-consistently in global mantle convection models

期刊

GONDWANA RESEARCH
卷 73, 期 -, 页码 96-122

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.gr.2019.03.015

关键词

Archean TTG; Mantle convection; Early Earth; Melting; Crustal production

资金

  1. European Research Council under the European Union [320639]
  2. Swiss University Conference
  3. Swiss Council of Federal Institutes of Technology through the Platform for Advanced Scientific Computing (PASC) program
  4. European Research Council (ERC) [320639] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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The majority of continental crust formed during the hotter Archean was composed of Tonalite-Trondhjemite-Granodiorite (TTG) rocks. In contrast to the present-day loci of crust formation around subduction zones and intra-plate tectonic settings, ITGs are formed when hydrated basalt melts at garnet-amphibolite, granulite or eclogite facies conditions. Generating continental crust requires a two step differentiation process. Basaltic magma is extracted from the pyrolytic mantle, is hydrated, and then partially melts to form continental crust. Here, we parameterise the melt production and melt extraction processes and show self-consistent generation of primordial continental crust using evolutionary thermochemical mantle convection models. To study the growth of TTG and the geodynamic regime of early Earth, we systematically vary the ratio of intrusive (plutonic) and eruptive (volcanic) magmatism, initial core temperature, and internal friction coefficient. As the amount of TTG that can be extracted from the basalt (or basalt-to-TTG production efficiency) is not known, we also test two different values in our simulations, thereby limiting TTG mass to 10% or 50% of basalt mass. For simulations with lower basalt-to-TTG production efficiency, the volume of TTG crust produced is in agreement with net crustal growth models but overall crustal (basaltic and TTG) composition stays more mafic than expected from geochemical data. With higher production efficiency, abundant TTG crust is produced, with a production rate far exceeding typical net crustal growth models but the felsic to mafic crustal ratio follows the expected trend. These modelling results indicate that (i) early Earth exhibited a plutonic squishy lid or vertical-tectonics geodynamic regime, (ii) present-day slab-driven subduction was not necessary for the production of early continental crust, and (iii) the Archean Earth was dominated by intrusive magmatism as opposed to heat-pipe eruptive magmatism. (C) 2019 International Association for Gondwana Research. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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