Mingqi Liu

and 2 more

One of the most prominent plate tectonic processes is seafloor spreading. But its formation processes are poorly understood. In this study, we thoroughly address how the brittle-ductile weakening process affects the formation and development of tectonic patterns at spreading centers using 3D magmatic-thermomechanical numerical models. Grain size evolution and brittle/plastic strain weakening are fully coupled into the model. A spectrum of tectonic patterns, from asymmetric long-lived detachment faults in rolling-hinge mode, short-lived detachment faults in flip-flop mode, to symmetric conjugate faults in flip-flop mode are documented in our models. Systematic numerical results indicate that fault strength reduction and axial brittle layer thickness are two pivotal factors in controlling the faulting patterns and spreading modes. Strain weakening induced by localized hydrothermal alteration can lead to the variation of the fault strength reduction. Strong strain weakening with large fault strength reduction results in very asymmetric detachment faults developing in rolling-hinge mode, while weak strain weakening leads to small fault strength reduction, forming conjugate faults. Moreover, the thermal structure beneath the ridge is influenced by spreading rates, hydrothermal circulation, and mantle potential temperature, which in turn controls the thickness of the axial brittle layer and results in variation in tectonic patterns. Further, in order to test a damage mechanism with a physical basis, we investigate grain size reduction at the root of detachment faults. We found that its effect in the formation of detachment faults appears to play a subordinate role compared to brittle/plastic strain weakening of faults.

Buchanan C Kerswell

and 2 more

Bodies of rock that are detached (recovered) from subducting oceanic plates, and exhumed to Earth’s surface, become invaluable records of the mechanical and chemical processing of rock along subduction interfaces. Exposures of interface rocks with high-pressure (HP) mineral assemblages provide insights into the nature of rock recovery, yet various interpretations concerning thermal gradients, recovery rates, and recovery depths arise when directly comparing the rock record with numerical simulations of subduction. Constraining recovery rates and depths from the rock record presents a major challenge because small sample sizes of HP rocks makes statistical inference weak. As an alternative approach, this study implements numerical simulations of oceanic-continental convergence and applies a classification algorithm to identify rock recovery. Over one million markers are classified from 64 simulations representing a large range of subduction zones. We find recovery P’s (depths) correlate strongly with convergence velocity and moderately with oceanic plate age, while PT gradients correlate strongly with oceanic plate age and upper-plate thickness. Recovery rates strongly correlate with upper-plate thickness, yet show no correlation with other boundary conditions. Likewise, PT distributions of recovered markers vary among numerical experiments and generally show poor overlap with the rock record. A significant gap in predicted marker recovery is found near 2 GPa and 550 ˚C, coinciding with the highest density of exhumed HP rocks. Implications for such a gap in marker recovery include numerical modeling uncertainties, petrologic uncertainties, selective sampling of exhumed HP rocks, or natural geodynamic factors not accounted for in numerical experiments.

Frances Westall

and 8 more

Venus today is inhospitable at the surface, its average temperature of 750 K being incompatible to the existence of life as we know it. However, the potential for past surface habitability and upper atmosphere (cloud) habitability at the present day is hotly debated, as the ongoing discussion regarding a possible phosphine signature coming from the clouds shows. We review current understanding about the evolution of Venus with special attention to scenarios where the planet may have been capable of hosting microbial life. We compare the possibility of past habitability on Venus to the case of Earth by reviewing the various hypotheses put forth concerning the origin of habitable conditions and the emergence and evolution of plate tectonics on both planets. Life emerged on Earth during the Hadean when the planet was dominated by higher mantle temperatures (by about 200$^\circ$C), an uncertain tectonic regime that likely included squishy lid/plume-lid and plate tectonics, and proto continents. Despite the lack of well-preserved crust dating from the Hadean-Paleoarchean eons, we attempt to resume current understanding of the environmental conditions during this critical period based on zircon crystals and geochemical signatures from this period, as well as studies of younger, relatively well-preserved rocks from the Paleoarchean. For these early, primitive life forms, the tectonic regime was not critical but it became an important means of nutrient recycling, with possible consequences to the global environment on the long-term, that was essential to the continuation of habitability and the evolution of life. For early Venus, the question of stable surface water is closely related to tectonics. We discuss potential transitions between stagnant lid and (episodic) tectonics with crustal recycling, as well as consequences for volatile cycling between Venus’ interior and atmosphere. In particular, we review insights into Venus’ early climate and examine critical questions about early rotation speed, reflective clouds, and silicate weathering, and summarize implications for Venus’ long-term habitability. Finally, the state of knowledge of the venusian clouds and the proposed detection of phosphine is covered.

Mingqi Liu

and 1 more

Although positive buoyancy of young lithosphere near spreading centers does not favor subduction, subduction initiation near ridges may occur upon forced compression due to their intrinsic rheological weakness. It has been repeatedly proposed that detachment faults may directly control the nucleation of new subduction zones. However, recent 3D numerical experiments suggested that direct inversion of a single detachment fault does not occur. Here, we further investigate numerically this controversy by focussing on the influence of brittle-ductile damage on the dynamics of near-ridge subduction initiation. We model self-consistently the inversion of inherited long-term spreading patterns using 3D high-resolution thermomechanical numerical models combining strain weakening of faults with grain size evolution in lithospheric mantle. Numerical results show that development and evolution of detachment faults are strongly affected by the brittle-ductile damage coupling. Forced compression predominantly thickens the weakest near-ridge region of oceanic lithosphere, and reactivates inherited extensional faults. This results in rotation of blocks along reactivated faults leading to their subsequent locking. As the result, the development of a new megathrust zone occurs, which accommodates further shortening and subduction initiation. Strain weakening has a key impact on the collapse of thickening mid-ocean ridge region and the occurrence of near-ridge subduction initiation. In contrast, grain size evolution of mantle plays a subordinate role in these processes by slightly modifying the localization of shear zones near brittle-ductile transition. Through comparing with the geological record, our numerical results provide new helpful insights into natural near-ridge subduction initiation processes recorded by the Mirdita ophiolite of Albani.

Kitttiphon Boonma

and 3 more

Lithospheric slab breakoff can occur in various styles including a horizontal ‘tearing’, where an initial weakness develops into tearing and laterally propagates along the slab. Slab tearing has been invoked to explain changes in plate kinematics in the Western Mediterranean and the tectonic uplift that led to the Messinian Salinity Crisis. However, this process remains debated regarding its surface signature and the physical parameters controlling its initiation and dynamics. Here, we use 3D thermo-mechanical modelling to investigate geodynamic parameters affecting the slab-tearing initiation and its lateral propagation, and to quantify the corresponding surface vertical motions. We find that an oblique convergence introduces an asymmetry that favors the initiation of one-sided slab tearing. The tectonic configuration of the overriding plate has little effect on the trench migration rate, and slab tearing can results purely from the negative buoyancy of the subducted slab. This force and the slab retreat it causes are enough to generate an arcuate plan-view shape to the orogen. The slab-tear propagation rate varies from 37-67 cm/yr. During propagation, the slab tearing depth increases along the subducting slab, with a shallow initial tear (80-150 km) and a deeper tear (170-200 km) on the opposite end. The time needed for the slab to detach completely is geologically fast (<2 Myr). The slab tearing can cause a prominent surface uplift of 0.5-1.5 km throughout the forearc region with an uplift rate of 0.23-2.16 mm/yr, which is consistent with the situation during the first stage of the Messinian Salinity Crisis.

Whitney M. Behr

and 3 more

The deep roots of subduction megathrusts exhibit aseismic slow slip events, commonly accompanied by tectonic tremor. Observations from exhumed rocks suggest this region of the subduction interface is a shear zone with frictional lenses embedded in a viscous matrix. Here we use numerical models to explore the transient slip characteristics of finite-width frictional-viscous megathrust shear zones. Our model utilizes an invariant, continuum-based, regularized form of rate- and state-dependent friction (RSF) and simulates earthquakes along spontaneously evolving faults embedded in a 2D heterogeneous continuum. The setup includes two elastic plates bounding a viscoelastoplastic shear zone (subduction interface melange) with inclusions (clasts) of varying distributions and viscosity contrasts with respect to the surrounding weaker matrix. The entire shear zone exhibits the same velocity-weakening RSF parameters, but the lower viscosity matrix has the capacity to switch between RSF and viscous creep as a function of local stress state. Results show that for a range of matrix viscosities near the frictional-viscous transition, viscous damping and stress heterogeneity in these shear zones both 1) sets the ‘speed limit’ for earthquake ruptures that nucleate in clasts such that they propagate at slow velocities; and 2) permits the transmission of slow slip from clast to clast, allowing slow ruptures to propagate substantial distances over the model domain. For reasonable input parameters, modeled events have moment-duration statistics, stress drops, and rupture propagation rates that match natural slow slip events. These results provide new insights into how geologic observations from ancient analogs of the slow slip source may scale up to match geophysical constraints on modern slow slip phenomena.

Kitttiphon Boonma

and 3 more

Lithospheric slab tearing, the process by which a subducted lithospheric plate is torn apart and sinks into the Earth’s mantle, has been proposed as a cause for significant surface vertical motions. However, little is known about the mechanisms that help initiate slab tearing and the consequential topographic changes. This study aims to explore this process by means of 3D thermo-mechanical modelling. We use the Gibraltar Arc region (Betics Cordillera) as a reference scenario of continental collision where such tearing-uplift interaction has been proposed. Our results suggest that the obliquity of the continental passive margin (relative to the trench axis) is a major influence on the initiation of slab tearing because it promotes a laterally diachronous continental collision, which leads to earlier tearing inception in one end of the slab. As a result of this, the model results predict an east-to-west slab tearing (tearing velocity 37.6–67.6 cm/yr with the lower-mantle viscosity of up to 1e+22 Pa·s). While the fast slab tearing (<2 Myr over 600 km wide slab) and the lack of arcuate slab in our models limit a direct comparison with the Western Mediterranean, this approach provides a new insight into the link between slab tearing in the mantle and surface uplift. Our models yield uplift rates of 0.23–2.16 mm/yr in response to slab tearing. This range is compatible with the uplift rate needed to achieve an equilibrium between seaway-uplift and seaway-erosion, which could have led to the closure of marine gateways during the onset of the Messinian Salinity Crisis.

Buchanan C Kerswell

and 2 more

A key feature of subduction zone geodynamics and thermal structure is the point at which the slab and mantle mechanically couple. This point defines the depth at which traction between slab and mantle begins to drive mantle wedge circulation and also corresponds with a major increase in temperature along the slab-mantle interface. Here we consider the effects of the backarc thermal structure and slab thermal parameter on coupling depth using two-dimensional thermomechanical models of oceanic-continental convergent margins. Coupling depth is strongly correlated with backarc lithospheric thickness, and weakly correlated with slab thermal parameter. Slab-mantle coupling becomes significant where weak, hydrous antigorite reacts to form strong, anhydrous olivine and pyroxene along the slab-mantle interface. Highly efficient (predominantly advective) heat transfer in the asthenospheric mantle wedge and inefficient (predominantly conductive) heat transfer in the lithospheric mantle wedge results in competing feedbacks that stabilize the antigorite-out reaction at depths determined primarily by the mechanical thickness of the backarc lithosphere. For subduction zone segments where backarc lithospheric thickness can be inverted from surface heat flow, our results provide a regression model that can be applied with slab thermal parameter to predict coupling depth. Consistently high backarc heat flow in circum-Pacific subduction zones suggests uniformly thin overriding plates likely regulated by lithospheric erosion caused by hydration and melting processes under volcanic arcs. This may also explain a common depth of slab-mantle coupling globally.

Attila Balazs

and 4 more

The evolution of subduction zones influences the rise and demise of forearc and back-arc basins on the overriding plate. We conducted 2D elasto-visco-plastic numerical models of oceanic subduction and subsequent continental collision which include erosion, sedimentation, and hydration processes. The models show the evolution of wedge-top and retro-forearc basins in the continental overriding plate, separated by a forearc high. These forearc regions are affected by repeated compression and extension phases. Higher subsidence rates are recorded in the syncline structure of the retro-forearc basin when the slab dip angle is higher and the subduction interface is stronger and before the slab reaches the 660 km upper-lower mantle discontinuity. The 3-4 km negative residual topographic signal is produced by the gradually steepening slab, which drags down the overlying upper plate. Extensional back-arc basins are either formed along inherited crustal or lithospheric weak zones at large distance from the arc region or are created above the hydrated mantle wedge originating from arc rifting. Back-arc subsidence is primarily governed by crustal thinning controlled by slab roll-back. Onset of collision and continental subduction is linked to the rapid uplift of the forearc basins; however, the back-arc region records ongoing extension during the initial phase of soft collision. Finally, during subsequent hard collision both the forearc and back-arc basins are ultimately affected by compression. Our modelling results provide insights into the evolution of Mediterranean subduction zones and propose that the Western-Eastern Alboran, Paola-Tyrrhenian, Transylvanian-Pannonian Basins should be considered as genetically connected forearc –back-arc basins, respectively.