Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 295(1-2), 205-218, doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2010.04.001, 2010
Preliminary three-dimensional model of mantle convection with deformable, mobile continental lithosphere
Masaki Yoshida
Abstract
Characteristic tectonic structures such as young orogenic belts and suture zones in
a continent are expected to be mechanically weaker than the stable part of the continental
lithosphere with the cratonic root (or cratonic lithosphere) and yield lateral viscosity
variations in the continental lithosphere. In the present-day Earth's lithosphere,
the pre-existing, mechanically weak zones emerge as a diffuse plate boundary.
However, the dynamic role of a weak (low-viscosity) continental margin (WCM)
in the stability of continental lithosphere has not been understood in terms of
geophysics. Here, a new numerical simulation model of mantle convection with a
compositionally and rheologically heterogeneous, deformable, mobile continental
lithosphere is presented for the first time by using three-dimensional regional
spherical-shell geometry. A compositionally buoyant and highly viscous continental
assemblage with pre-existing WCMs, analogous to the past supercontinent,
is modeled and imposed on well-developed mantle convection whose vigor of convection,
internal heating rate, and rheological parameters are appropriate for the Earth's mantle.
The visco-plastic oceanic lithosphere and the associated subduction of oceanic plates are
incorporated. The time integration of the advection of continental materials with
zero chemical diffusion is performed by a tracer particle method.
The time evolution of mantle convection after setting the model supercontinent is
followed over 800 Myr. Earth-like continental drift is successfully reproduced,
and the characteristic thermal interaction between the mantle and the continent/supercontinent
is observed in my new numerical model. Results reveal that the WCM protects the cratonic
lithosphere from being stretched by the convecting mantle and may play a significant
role in the stability of the cratonic lithosphere during the geological timescale
because it acts as a buffer that prevents the cratonic lithosphere from undergoing
global deformation. From geological evidence that a cratonic root survives at the
surface for billions of years, the WCM may have existed in the past supercontinent
throughout the Earth's geologic history. The preliminary model presented here should
represent an important step toward realizing a more realistic model that could be
used to address many outstanding geodynamic problems about the thermal and mechanical
feedbacks between the mantle and continents and the temporal evolution of the Earth's mantle structure.