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Published March 13, 2012 | Published
Journal Article Open

Shape of thermal plumes in a compressible mantle with depth-dependent viscosity

Abstract

The mantle plume model has been invoked to explain the formation of large igneous provinces (LIP) and associated age-progressive hotspot tracks. The shape of mantle plumes should be significantly altered by physical properties of the mantle and will influence how plume theory is used to interpret observational constraints. Based on theoretical analysis and numerical modeling, we explore the parameters that control the shape of thermal plumes in a compressible mantle. A theoretical analysis shows that the ambient mantle viscosity plays a dominant role in determining the radius of thermal plumes. This analysis is verified by numerical solutions. A continuously decreasing mantle viscosity from the CMB to the lithosphere can effectively reduce the radius of both plume head and tail. A low viscosity zone between 100 and 660 km depths where viscosity decreases by a factor of 100 reduces the radius of a plume conduit by approximately a factor of 3. Such a low viscosity zone can reduce the plume head radius impinging the lithosphere from larger than 500 km to ∼200 km. When the low viscosity zone is confined to between 100 and 410 km depths, the plume head size becomes even smaller. To form large igneous provinces, a small plume head implies time-progressive volcanism from LIP center to LIP edge.

Additional Information

© 2012 American Geophysical Union. Received 18 January 2012; accepted 16 February 2012; published 13 March 2012. We thank Norm Sleep and an anonymous reviewer for their constructive reviews which significantly improved this paper. WL was supported by O. K. Earl Fellowship, and NSF grants EAR-0810303 and EAR-0855815. The Editor thanks Norman H. Sleep and an anonymous reviewer for their assistance in evaluating this paper.

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