Atlas of the underworld: Slab remnants in the mantle, their sinking history, and a new outlook on lower mantle viscosity

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Abstract

Across the entire mantle we interpret 94 positive seismic wave-speed anomalies as subducted lithosphere and associate these slabs with their geological record. We document this as the Atlas of the Underworld, also accessible online at www.atlas-of-the-underworld.org, a compilation comprising subduction systems active in the past ~ 300 Myr. Deeper slabs are correlated to older geological records, assuming no relative horizontal motions between adjacent slabs following break-off, using knowledge of global plate circuits, but without assuming a mantle reference frame. The longest actively subducting slabs identified reach the depth of ~ 2500 km and some slabs have impinged on Large Low Shear Velocity Provinces in the deepest mantle. Anomously fast sinking of some slabs occurs in regions affected by long-term plume rising. We conclude that slab remnants eventually sink from the upper mantle to the core-mantle boundary. The range in subduction-age versus – depth in the lower mantle is largely inherited from the upper mantle history of subduction. We find a significant depth variation in average sinking speed of slabs. At the top of the lower mantle average slab sinking speeds are between 10 and 40 mm/yr, followed by a deceleration to 10–15 mm/yr down to depths around 1600–1700 km. In this interval, in situ time-stationary sinking rates suggest deceleration from 20 to 30 mm/yr to 4–8 mm/yr, increasing to 12–15 mm/yr below 2000 km. This corroborates the existence of a slab deceleration zone but we do not observe long-term (> 60 My) slab stagnation, excluding long-term stagnation due to compositional effects. Conversion of slab sinking profiles to viscosity profiles shows the general trend that mantle viscosity increases in the slab deceleration zone below which viscosity slowly decreases in the deep mantle. This is at variance with most published viscosity profiles that are derived from different observations, but agrees qualitatively with recent viscosity profiles suggested from material experiments.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)309-448
Number of pages140
JournalTectonophysics
Volume723
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 16 Jan 2018

Funding

The seed for this research and its predecessor van der Meer et al. (2010) was planted during a sabbatical visit of Rob van der Voo to Utrecht University in 1999 and the granting of the M.C. Escher prize for DvdM's MSc. thesis in 2002. DvdM acknowledges Nexen for granting study leave to work on this research. DJJvH acknowledges ERC Starting Grant 306810 (SINK) and NWO Vidi grant 864.11.004 . WS acknowledges support from the Research Council of Norway through its Centres of Excellence funding scheme, project number 223272 , and support from the Netherlands research centre for Integrated Solid Earth Science (ISES). We thank Thomas van der Linden for developing the Atlas-of-the-underworld.org website. Bernard Steinberger, Jeroen Ritsema, John Hernlund, Wouter Schellart, Patrick Cordier, Hana Cízková, Arie van den Berg are thanked for discussions on slab sinking and mantle rheology. Appendix A

Keywords

  • Atlas
  • Mantle
  • Orogeny
  • Slab
  • Subduction
  • Underworld

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