Using thermo-mechanical models of subduction to constrain effective mantle viscosity
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Authors
Garel, Fanny
Thoraval, C
Tommasi, Andrea
Demouchy, Sylvie
Davies, D. Rhodri
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Elsevier
Abstract
Mantle convection and plate dynamics transfer and deform solid material on scales of hundreds to
thousands of km. However, viscoplastic deformation of rocks arises from motions of defects at subcrystal scale, such as vacancies or dislocations. In this study, results from numerical experiments
of dislocation dynamics in olivine for temperatures and stresses relevant for both lithospheric and
asthenospheric mantle (800–1700 K and 50–500 MPa; Gouriet et al., 2019) are used to derive
three sigmoid parameterizations (erf, tanh, algebraic), which express stress evolution as a function of
temperature and strain rate. The three parameterizations fit well the results of dislocation dynamics
models and may be easily incorporated into geodynamical models. Here, they are used in an upper
mantle thermo-mechanical model of subduction, in association with diffusion creep and pseudo-brittle
flow laws. Simulations using different dislocation creep parameterizations exhibit distinct dynamics,
from unrealistically fast-sinking slabs in the erf case to very slowly-sinking slabs in the algebraic
case. These differences could not have been predicted a priori from comparison with experimentally
determined mechanical data, since they principally arise from feedbacks between slab sinking velocity,
temperature, drag, and buoyancy, which are controlled by the strain rate dependence of the effective
asthenosphere viscosity. Comparison of model predictions to geophysical observations and to uppermantle viscosity inferred from glacial isostatic adjustment shows that the tanh parameterization best
fits both crystal-scale and Earth-scale constraints. However, the parameterization of diffusion creep is
also important for subduction bulk dynamics since it sets the viscosity of slowly deforming domains in
the convecting mantle. Within the range of uncertainties of experimental data and, most importantly,
of the actual rheological parameters prevailing in the upper mantle (e.g. grain size, chemistry), viscosity
enabling realistic mantle properties and plate dynamics may be reproduced by several combinations of
parameterizations for different deformation mechanisms. Deriving mantle rheology cannot therefore rely
solely on the extrapolation of semi-empirical flow laws. The present study shows that thermo-mechanical
models of plate and mantle dynamics can be used to constrain the effective rheology of Earth’s mantle
in the presence of multiple deformation mechanisms.
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Earth and Planetary Science Letters
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2099-12-31
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