Experimental models of extension of continental lithosphere weakened by percolation of sthenospheric melts
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2007
abstract:
Analogue models are used to investigate extension of a continental lithosphere weakened by asthenospheric melts percolating
through the upper mantle, a process that has been hypothesised to control the opening of the Ligurian Tethys. Models were performed
in a centrifuge apparatus and reproduced, by using materials such as sand and viscous mixtures, extension of ~60-km thick, three layer continental lithosphere floating above the asthenosphere. The percolated lithospheric mantle was assumed to be characterised
by a rheological behaviour similar to that of the asthenosphere. Two sets of experiments investigated the influence on deformation
of (1) the thickness of the percolated mantle and the associated strength contrast between the normal and weakened lithosphere, and
(2) the lateral width of the weakened zone. Model results suggest that mantle percolation by asthenospheric melts is able to promote
strong localised thinning of the continental lithosphere, provided that a significant thickness of the lithospheric mantle is weakened
by migrating melts within a narrow region. Strain localisation is maximised for percolation of the whole lithospheric mantle and
strong strength contrast between the normal and weakened lithosphere. Under these conditions, the thickness of the lithosphere
may be reduced to less than ~12 km in ~3 Ma of extension. Conversely, localised thinning is strongly reduced if the thickness of
the percolated zone is <=1/3 of the thickness of the whole lithospheric mantle and/or the lithosphere is weakened over wide regions.
Overall, model results support the working hypothesis that mantle percolation by asthenospheric melts is a controlling factor in the
transition from distributed continental deformation to localised oceanic spreading
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
analogue modelling; mantle percolation and impregnation; lithospheric thinning; strain localisation; continental break-up
List of contributors: