Decompression melting driving intraplate volcanism in Australia: Evidence from magnetotelluric sounding


Autoria(s): Aivazpourporgou, Sahereh; Thiel, Stephan; Hayman, Patrick C.; Moresi, Louis N.; Heinson, Graham
Data(s)

2015

Resumo

A long-period magnetotelluric (MT) survey, with 39 sites covering an area of 270 by 150 km, has identified melt within the thinned lithosphere of Pleistocene-Holocene Newer Volcanics Province (NVP) in southeast Australia, which has been variously attributed to mantle plume activity or edge-driven mantle convection. Two-dimensional inversions from the MT array imaged a low-resistivity anomaly (10-30Ωm) beneath the NVP at ∼40-80 km depth, which is consistent with the presence of ∼1.5-4% partial melt in the lithosphere, but inconsistent with elevated iron content, metasomatism products or a hot spot. The conductive zone is located within thin juvenile oceanic mantle lithosphere, which was accreted onto thicker Proterozoic continental mantle lithosphere. We propose that the NVP owes its origin to decompression melting within the asthenosphere, promoted by lithospheric thickness variations in conjunction with rapid shear, where asthenospheric material is drawn by shear flow at a "step" at the base of the lithosphere.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/84949/

Publicador

American Geophysical Union

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/84949/1/84949.pdf

DOI:10.1002/2014GL060088

Aivazpourporgou, Sahereh, Thiel, Stephan, Hayman, Patrick C., Moresi, Louis N., & Heinson, Graham (2015) Decompression melting driving intraplate volcanism in Australia: Evidence from magnetotelluric sounding. Geophysical Research Letters, 42(2), pp. 346-354.

Direitos

Copyright 2015 American Geophysical Union

Fonte

School of Earth, Environmental & Biological Sciences; Science & Engineering Faculty

Palavras-Chave #Australia #decompression #magnetotelluric #melt #shear #volcanoes #Magnetotellurics #Melting #Shear flow #Shearing #Decompression melting #Lithospheric thickness #Magnetotelluric soundings #Mantle lithosphere #Southeast australia #Structural geology #accretion #lithosphere #magnetotelluric method #mantle convection #plate tectonics #volcanism
Tipo

Journal Article