TY - JOUR
T1 - Multidisciplinary Constraints on the Abundance of Diamond and Eclogite in the Cratonic Lithosphere
AU - Garber, Joshua M.
AU - Maurya, Satish
AU - Hernandez, Jean Alexis
AU - Duncan, Megan S.
AU - Zeng, Li
AU - Zhang, Hongluo L.
AU - Faul, Ulrich
AU - McCammon, Catherine
AU - Montagner, Jean Paul
AU - Moresi, Louis
AU - Romanowicz, Barbara A.
AU - Rudnick, Roberta L.
AU - Stixrude, Lars
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
©2018. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2018/7
Y1 - 2018/7
N2 - Some seismic models derived from tomographic studies indicate elevated shear-wave velocities (≥4.7 km/s) around 120–150 km depth in cratonic lithospheric mantle. These velocities are higher than those of cratonic peridotites, even assuming a cold cratonic geotherm (i.e., 35 mW/m2 surface heat flux) and accounting for compositional heterogeneity in cratonic peridotite xenoliths and the effects of anelasticity. We reviewed various geophysical and petrologic constraints on the nature of cratonic roots (seismic velocities, lithology/mineralogy, electrical conductivity, and gravity) and explored a range of permissible rock and mineral assemblages that can explain the high seismic velocities. These constraints suggest that diamond and eclogite are the most likely high-Vs candidates to explain the observed velocities, but matching the high shear-wave velocities requires either a large proportion of eclogite (>50 vol.%) or the presence of up to 3 vol.% diamond, with the exact values depending on peridotite and eclogite compositions and the geotherm. Both of these estimates are higher than predicted by observations made on natural samples from kimberlites. However, a combination of ≤20 vol.% eclogite and ~2 vol.% diamond may account for high shear-wave velocities, in proportions consistent with multiple geophysical observables, data from natural samples, and within mass balance constraints for global carbon. Our results further show that cratonic thermal structure need not be significantly cooler than determined from xenolith thermobarometry.
AB - Some seismic models derived from tomographic studies indicate elevated shear-wave velocities (≥4.7 km/s) around 120–150 km depth in cratonic lithospheric mantle. These velocities are higher than those of cratonic peridotites, even assuming a cold cratonic geotherm (i.e., 35 mW/m2 surface heat flux) and accounting for compositional heterogeneity in cratonic peridotite xenoliths and the effects of anelasticity. We reviewed various geophysical and petrologic constraints on the nature of cratonic roots (seismic velocities, lithology/mineralogy, electrical conductivity, and gravity) and explored a range of permissible rock and mineral assemblages that can explain the high seismic velocities. These constraints suggest that diamond and eclogite are the most likely high-Vs candidates to explain the observed velocities, but matching the high shear-wave velocities requires either a large proportion of eclogite (>50 vol.%) or the presence of up to 3 vol.% diamond, with the exact values depending on peridotite and eclogite compositions and the geotherm. Both of these estimates are higher than predicted by observations made on natural samples from kimberlites. However, a combination of ≤20 vol.% eclogite and ~2 vol.% diamond may account for high shear-wave velocities, in proportions consistent with multiple geophysical observables, data from natural samples, and within mass balance constraints for global carbon. Our results further show that cratonic thermal structure need not be significantly cooler than determined from xenolith thermobarometry.
KW - cratonic lithosphere
KW - diamond
KW - eclogite
KW - electrical conductivity
KW - petrologic modeling
KW - seismic tomography
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85050453025&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1029/2018GC007534
DO - 10.1029/2018GC007534
M3 - Article
SN - 1525-2027
VL - 19
SP - 2062
EP - 2086
JO - Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems
JF - Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems
IS - 7
ER -