Constraining the source of mantle plumes
Constraining the source of mantle plumes
Date
2016-01-08
Authors
Cagney, Neil
Crameri, Fabio
Newsome, William H.
Lithgow-Bertelloni, Carolina
Cotel, Aline
Hart, Stanley R.
Whitehead, John A.
Crameri, Fabio
Newsome, William H.
Lithgow-Bertelloni, Carolina
Cotel, Aline
Hart, Stanley R.
Whitehead, John A.
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Abstract
In order to link the geochemical signature of hot spot basalts to Earth’s
deep interior, it is first necessary to understand how plumes sample different
regions of the mantle. Here, we investigate the relative amounts of deep
and shallow mantle material that are entrained by an ascending plume and
constrain its source region. The plumes are generated in a viscous syrup
using an isolated heater for a range of Rayleigh numbers. The velocity fields
are measured using stereoscopic Particle-Image Velocimetry, and the concept
of the ‘vortex ring bubble’ is used to provide an objective definition of the
plume geometry. Using this plume geometry, the plume composition can
be analysed in terms of the proportion of material that has been entrained
from different depths. We show that the plume composition can be well
described using a simple empirical relationship, which depends only on a single parameter, the sampling coefficient, Sc. High-Sc plumes are composed
of material which originated from very deep in the fluid domain, while low-Sc
plumes contain material entrained from a range of depths. The analysis is
also used to show that the geometry of the plume can be described using a
similarity solution, in agreement with previous studies. Finally, numerical
simulations are used to vary both the Rayleigh number and viscosity contrast
independently. The simulations allow us to predict the value of the sampling
coefficient for mantle plumes; we find that as a plume reaches the lithosphere,
90% of its composition has been derived from the lowermost 260−750 km in
the mantle, and negligible amounts are derived from the shallow half of the
lower mantle. This result implies that isotope geochemistry cannot provide
direct information about this un-sampled region, and that the various known
geochemical reservoirs must lie in the deepest few hundred kilometres of the
mantle.
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© The Author(s), 2016. This is the author's version of the work and is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Earth and Planetary Science Letters 453 (2016): 55-63, doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2015.12.008.