Influence of grain size evolution and water content on the seismic structure of the oceanic upper mantle

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2007-06
Authors
Elsenbeck, James R.
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10.1575/1912/1821
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Ocean bottom
Structural geology
Abstract
Grain size is an important material property that has significant effects on the viscosity, dominant deformation mechanism, attenuation, and shear wave velocity of the oceanic upper mantle. Several studies have investigated the kinetics of grain size evolution, but have yet to incorporate these evolution equations into large-scale flow models of the oceanic upper mantle. We construct self-consistent 1.5-D steady-state Couette flow models for the oceanic upper mantle to constrain how grain size evolves with depth assuming a composite diffusion-dislocation creep rheology. We investigate the importance of water content by examining end-member models for a dry, wet, and dehydrated mantle (with dehydration above ~60-70 km depth). We find that grain size increases with depth, and varies with both plate age and water content. Specifically, the dehydration model predicts a grain size of ~11 mm at a depth of 150 km for 75 Myr-old oceanic mantle. This results in a viscosity of ~1019 Pa s, consistent with estimates from geoid and glacial rebound studies. We also find that deformation is dominated by dislocation creep beneath ~60-70 km depth, in agreement with observations of seismic anisotropy in the oceanic upper mantle. The calculated grain size profiles are input into a Burger's model system to calculate seismic quality factor (Q) and shear wave velocity (Vs). For ages older than 50 Myrs, we find that Q and Vs predicted by the dehydration case best match seismic reference models for Q and the low seismic shear wave velocity zone (LVZ) observed in the oceanic upper mantle.
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Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements of the degree Master of Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution June 2007
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Elsenbeck, J. R. (2007). Influence of grain size evolution and water content on the seismic structure of the oceanic upper mantle [Doctoral thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution]. Woods Hole Open Access Server. https://doi.org/10.1575/1912/1821
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