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How high can mechanical stresses be within lithospheric materials?
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Thanks to plate tectonics, the Earth lithosphere is composed of very different lithologies, most of which consisting of peridotites, usually covered by either oceanic or continental crust. Depending on several parameters including composition, pressure, temperature, and strain rate, lithospheric materials can deform smoothly and silently or generate seismic ruptures. Collision belts and subduction systems, including subducted materials being heated and sheared in the mantle transition zone, are characterized by intense seismicity; in contrast, the bottom of lithospheric plates, known as lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary (LAB), is not associated with any seismicity, giving the impression that oceanic plates have the intrinsic ability to maintain their basal stress at relatively low values. Comparing results from experimental geophysics, field geology, geodynamics modelling and seismology, I discuss the representativity of experimental findings and potential consequences on our understanding of the rheology of the lithosphere.The idea that lithospheric materials at intermediate depths or deeper cannot support high deviatoric stresses is still supported by many studies in geosciences or physics. Plenty of authors start by recalling that brittle failure cannot occur at high pressure, and thus conclude that deep earthquakes and their shallow counterparts should consist of totally different events relying on totally different physical processes. Yet, deep seismicity is characterized by double-couple mechanisms and thus is an actual proof of seismic ruptures at great depths. Here I recall achievements from experiments under synchrotron radiation, suggesting that differential stresses can reach several gigapascals within subducting slabs at intermediate depths (30-300 km). In either peridotites or lawsonite blueschists, high-energy X-rays reveal differential stresses above 2 GPa for confining pressures of 1-1.5 GPa, and reaching ≈ 3 GPa for confining pressures of 2.5-3.5 GPa. This is further supported by both field geology studies and numerical modelling.While mean stresses in seismogenic zones exhibit severe deviations from lithostatic pressure, the base of lithospheric plates deforms in a way that never triggers seismicity. The coupling between lithospheric plates and the underlying asthenosphere is still a matter of debate. According to global dynamics modelling, a basal shear stress as low as only 10-100 MPa would suffice to allow decoupling at the LAB. While partial melting has recently been favoured as an explanation for plate motion, experimental results on an analogue (germanium peridotite) suggest a solid-state lubrication process, involving grain-boundary disordering, and would confirm that mechanical stresses do not exceed 200 MPa at the LAB (60-120 km).
Title: How high can mechanical stresses be within lithospheric materials?
Description:
Thanks to plate tectonics, the Earth lithosphere is composed of very different lithologies, most of which consisting of peridotites, usually covered by either oceanic or continental crust.
Depending on several parameters including composition, pressure, temperature, and strain rate, lithospheric materials can deform smoothly and silently or generate seismic ruptures.
Collision belts and subduction systems, including subducted materials being heated and sheared in the mantle transition zone, are characterized by intense seismicity; in contrast, the bottom of lithospheric plates, known as lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary (LAB), is not associated with any seismicity, giving the impression that oceanic plates have the intrinsic ability to maintain their basal stress at relatively low values.
Comparing results from experimental geophysics, field geology, geodynamics modelling and seismology, I discuss the representativity of experimental findings and potential consequences on our understanding of the rheology of the lithosphere.
The idea that lithospheric materials at intermediate depths or deeper cannot support high deviatoric stresses is still supported by many studies in geosciences or physics.
Plenty of authors start by recalling that brittle failure cannot occur at high pressure, and thus conclude that deep earthquakes and their shallow counterparts should consist of totally different events relying on totally different physical processes.
Yet, deep seismicity is characterized by double-couple mechanisms and thus is an actual proof of seismic ruptures at great depths.
Here I recall achievements from experiments under synchrotron radiation, suggesting that differential stresses can reach several gigapascals within subducting slabs at intermediate depths (30-300 km).
In either peridotites or lawsonite blueschists, high-energy X-rays reveal differential stresses above 2 GPa for confining pressures of 1-1.
5 GPa, and reaching ≈ 3 GPa for confining pressures of 2.
5-3.
5 GPa.
This is further supported by both field geology studies and numerical modelling.
While mean stresses in seismogenic zones exhibit severe deviations from lithostatic pressure, the base of lithospheric plates deforms in a way that never triggers seismicity.
The coupling between lithospheric plates and the underlying asthenosphere is still a matter of debate.
According to global dynamics modelling, a basal shear stress as low as only 10-100 MPa would suffice to allow decoupling at the LAB.
While partial melting has recently been favoured as an explanation for plate motion, experimental results on an analogue (germanium peridotite) suggest a solid-state lubrication process, involving grain-boundary disordering, and would confirm that mechanical stresses do not exceed 200 MPa at the LAB (60-120 km).
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