Abstract A major goal in Earth Science has been to understand how geochemical characteristics of lavas at the Earth's surface relate to the location and formation history of specific regions in the Earth's interior. For example, some of the strongest evidence for the preservation of primitive material comes from low4He/3He ratios in ocean island basalts, but the location of the primitive helium reservoir(s) remains unknown. Here we combine whole‐mantle seismic tomography, simulations of mantle flow, and a global compilation of new and existing measurements of the4He/3He ratios in ocean island basalts to constrain the source location of primitive4He/3He material. Our geodynamic simulations predict the present‐day surface expression of plumes to be laterally offset from their lower mantle source locations. When this lateral offset is accounted for, a strong relationship emerges between minimum4He/3He ratios in oceanic basalts and seismically slow regions, which are generally located within the two large low shear‐wave velocity provinces (LLSVPs). Conversely, no significant relationship is observed between maximum208Pb*/206Pb*ratios and seismically slow regions in the lowermost mantle. These results indicate that primitive materials are geographically restricted to LLSVPs, while recycled materials are more broadly distributed across the lower mantle. The primitive nature of the LLSVPs indicates these regions are not composed entirely of recycled slabs, while complementary xenon and tungsten isotopic anomalies require the primitive portion of the LLSVPs to have formed during Earth's accretion, survived the Moon‐forming giant impact, and remained relatively unmixed during the subsequent 4.5 billion years of mantle convection.
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The Formation of Hot Thermal Anomalies in Cold Subduction‐Influenced Regions of Earth's Lowermost Mantle
Abstract The Earth's lowermost mantle is characterized by two large low shear velocity provinces (LLSVPs). The regions outside the LLSVPs have been suggested to be strongly influenced by subducted slabs and, therefore, much colder than the LLSVPs. However, localized low‐velocity seismic anomalies have been detected in the subduction‐influenced regions, whose origin remains unclear. Here, three‐dimensional geodynamic calculations are performed, and they show that linear, ridge‐like hot thermal anomalies, or thermal ridges, form in the relatively cold, downwelling regions of the lowermost mantle. Like the formation of Richter rolls due to sublithosphere small‐scale convection (SSC), the thermal ridges form as a result of SSC from the basal thermal boundary layer and they extend in directions parallel to the surrounding mantle flow. The formation of thermal ridges in subduction regions of the lowermost mantle is very sensitive to the thermal structures of the subducted materials, and thermal heterogeneities brought to the bottom of the mantle by subducting slabs greatly promote the formation of thermal ridges. The formation of thermal ridges is also facilitated by the increase of core‐mantle boundary heat flux and vigor of lowermost mantle convection. The thermal ridges may explain the low‐velocity seismic anomalies outside of the LLSVPs in the lowermost mantle. The results suggest that the relatively cold, subduction‐influenced regions of the Earth's lowermost mantle may contain localized hot anomalies.
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- PAR ID:
- 10454537
- Publisher / Repository:
- DOI PREFIX: 10.1029
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth
- Volume:
- 125
- Issue:
- 6
- ISSN:
- 2169-9313
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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