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The importance of grain size to mantle dynamics and seismological observations

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TLDR
In this article, the authors study grain size evolution, its interplay with stress and strain rate in the convecting mantle, and its influence on seismic velocities and attenuation.
Abstract
Grain size plays a key role in controlling the mechanical properties of the Earth's mantle, affecting both long-timescale flow patterns and anelasticity on the timescales of seismic wave propagation. However, dynamic models of Earth's convecting mantle usually implement flow laws with constant grain size, stress-independent viscosity, and a limited treatment of changes in mineral assemblage. We study grain size evolution, its interplay with stress and strain rate in the convecting mantle, and its influence on seismic velocities and attenuation. Our geodynamic models include the simultaneous and competing effects of dynamic recrystallization resulting from dislocation creep, grain growth in multiphase assemblages, and recrystallization at phase transitions. They show that grain size evolution drastically affects the dynamics of mantle convection and the rheology of the mantle, leading to lateral viscosity variations of six orders of magnitude due to grain size alone, and controlling the shape of upwellings and downwellings. Using laboratory-derived scaling relationships, we convert model output to seismologically-observable parameters (velocity, attenuation) facilitating comparison to Earth structure. Reproducing the fundamental features of the Earth's attenuation profile requires reduced activation volume and relaxed shear moduli in the lower mantle compared to the upper mantle, in agreement with geodynamic constraints. Faster lower mantle grain growth yields best fit to seismic observations, consistent with our re-examination of high pressure grain growth parameters. We also show that ignoring grain size in interpretations of seismic anomalies may underestimate the Earth's true temperature variations.

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Citations
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Anelasticity from seismic to tidal timescales: Theory and observations

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine strain energy dissipation of Earth's normal modes and body tides in order to compare these observations with predictions from an experimental model of intrinsic dissipation, and they employ a recently developed self-consistent treatment of modes and tides, that includes the separation of dynamical processes (self-gravity and inertia) from intrinsic attenuation.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

The kinetics of precipitation from supersaturated solid solutions

TL;DR: In this paper, an analysis is made of the process whereby diffusion effects can cause the precipitation of grains of a second phase in a supersaturated solid solution, and the kinetics of this type of grain growth are examined in detail.
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Deformation-Mechanism Maps: The Plasticity and Creep of Metals and Ceramics

TL;DR: Deformation-mechanism maps: the plasticity and creep of metals and ceramics as discussed by the authors, Deformation-Mechanism Maps of metal deformation: the deformation and the creep of metal and ceramic.
Journal ArticleDOI

Major and trace element composition of the depleted MORB mantle (DMM)

TL;DR: Asimow et al. as mentioned in this paper derived an estimate for the chemical composition of the depleted MORB mantle (DMM), the source reservoir to mid-ocean ridge basalts (MORBs), which represents at least 30% the mass of the whole silicate Earth.
Book ChapterDOI

Rheology of the Upper Mantle and the Mantle Wedge: A View from the Experimentalists

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide a critical review of flow law parameters for olivine aggregates and single crystals deformed in the diffusion creep and dislocation creep regimes under both wet and dry conditions.
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