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Published August 27, 2010 | public
Journal Article

The Dynamics of Plate Tectonics and Mantle Flow: From Local to Global Scales

Abstract

Plate tectonics is regulated by driving and resisting forces concentrated at plate boundaries, but observationally constrained high-resolution models of global mantle flow remain a computational challenge. We capitalized on advances in adaptive mesh refinement algorithms on parallel computers to simulate global mantle flow by incorporating plate motions, with individual plate margins resolved down to a scale of 1 kilometer. Back-arc extension and slab rollback are emergent consequences of slab descent in the upper mantle. Cold thermal anomalies within the lower mantle couple into oceanic plates through narrow high-viscosity slabs, altering the velocity of oceanic plates. Viscous dissipation within the bending lithosphere at trenches amounts to ~5 to 20% of the total dissipation through the entire lithosphere and mantle.

Additional Information

© 2010 American Association for the Advancement of Science. Received 21 April 2010; accepted 14 July 2010. We thank W. Leng, T. Becker, and J.-P. Avouac for helpful comments on the manuscript. This work was partially supported by NSF's PetaApps program (OCI-0749334 and OCI-0748898), NSF Earth Sciences (EAR-0426271 and EAR-0810303), U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science's SciDAC program (DE-FC02-06ER25782 and DE-SC0002710), NSF grants CCF-0427985 and DMS-072474, and the Caltech Tectonics Observatory (by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation). Computing resources on Texas Advanced Computing Center's Ranger and Spur systems were provided through the NSF TeraGrid under grant TG-MCA04N026.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 20, 2023