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Journal ArticleDOI

Preservation of ancient and fertile lithospheric mantle beneath the southwestern United States.

TLDR
It is suggested that depleted mantle is intrinsically less dense than fertile mantle (due to iron having been lost when melt was extracted from the rock), which allows the depleted mantle to form a thicker thermal boundary layer between the deep convecting mantle and the crust, thus reducing tectonic activity at the surface.
Abstract
Stable continental regions, free from tectonic activity, are generally found only within ancient cratons—the centres of continents which formed in the Archaean era, 4.0–2.5 Gyr ago. But in the Cordilleran mountain belt of western North America some younger (middle Proterozoic) regions have remained stable, whereas some older (late Archaean) regions have been tectonically disturbed, suggesting that age alone does not determine lithospheric strength and crustal stability. Here we report rhenium–osmium isotope and mineral compositions of peridotite xenoliths from two regions of the Cordilleran mountain belt. We found that the younger, undeformed Colorado plateau is underlain by lithospheric mantle that is 'depleted' (deficient in minerals extracted by partial melting of the rock), whereas the older (Archaean), yet deformed, southern Basin and Range province is underlain by 'fertile' lithospheric mantle (not depleted by melt extraction). We suggest that the apparent relationship between composition and lithospheric strength, inferred from different degrees of crustal deformation, occurs because depleted mantle is intrinsically less dense than fertile mantle (due to iron having been lost when melt was extracted from the rock). This allows the depleted mantle to form a thicker thermal boundary layer between the deep convecting mantle and the crust, thus reducing tectonic activity at the surface. The inference that not all Archaean crust developed a strong and thick thermal boundary layer leads to the possibility that such ancient crust may have been overlooked because of its intensive reworking or lost from the geological record owing to preferential recycling.

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Book ChapterDOI

Geochemical/Petrologic Constraints on the Origin of Cratonic Mantle

TL;DR: In this article, Petrologic/geochemical predictions of three endmember scenarios for the origin of cratonic mantle are discussed: (1) high-degree melting in a very hot plume head with a potential temperature >1650°C, (2) accretion of oceanic lithosphere, (3) and (4) arc lithosphere.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lithospheric dismemberment and magmatic processes of the Great Basin–Colorado Plateau transition, Utah, implied from magnetotellurics

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors collected an east-west profile of 117 wideband and 30 long-period magnetotelluric (MT) soundings along latitude 38.5°N from southeastern Nevada across Utah to the Colorado border, and concluded that strength heterogeneity is the primary control on locus of deformation across the transition zone, with modulating force components.
Journal ArticleDOI

Basal continental mantle lithosphere displaced by flat-slab subduction

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present numerical thermal-mechanical models of flat-slab subduction that show the flattening of the slab results in a compression of the continental plate through end loading.
Journal ArticleDOI

The role of chemical boundary layers in regulating the thickness of continental and oceanic thermal boundary layers

TL;DR: In this article, a scaling law is presented that accounts for the presence of a preexisting strong chemical boundary layer and predicts that the onset time of convective instability correlates with the thickness of the chemical boundary layers, which itself correlates with potential temperature of the mantle at the time of melting.
Journal ArticleDOI

Crust and upper mantle shear wave structure of the southwest United States: Implications for rifting and support for high elevation

TL;DR: In this paper, surface wave phase velocities from 29 earthquakes are used to map the shear velocity structure to 350 km depth across the 950 km-long Rio Grande Rift Seismic Transect Experiment (LA RISTRA) seismic array in the southwest United States.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The composition of the Earth

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared the relative abundances of the refractory elements in carbonaceous, ordinary, and enstatite chondritic meteorites and found that the most consistent composition of the Earth's core is derived from the seismic profile and its interpretation, compared with primitive meteorites, and chemical and petrological models of peridotite-basalt melting relationships.
Journal ArticleDOI

Composition and development of the continental tectosphere

TL;DR: In this article, the Wilson cycle is used to balance the tectosphere by depleting the continental upper mantle in a basalt-like component, which stabilizes the old continental nuclei against convective disruption.
Journal ArticleDOI

Os, Sr, Nd, and Pb isotope systematics of southern African peridotite xenoliths: Implications for the chemical evolution of subcontinental mantle

TL;DR: Isotope analyses of Os, Sr, Nd, and Pb elements were caried out on twelve peridotite xenoliths from the Jagersfontein, Letseng-la-terae, Thaba Patsoa, Mothae, and Premier kimberlites of southern Africa, to investigate the timing and the nature of melt extraction from the continental lithosphere and its relation to the continent formation and stabilization.
Journal ArticleDOI

Proterozoic crustal history of the western United States as determined by neodymium isotopic mapping

TL;DR: In this article, three age provinces have been delineated, each generally northeast-southwest trending, having decreasing crystallization ages and increasing initial e nd values with increasing distance southeastward from the Archean craton.
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