Core-mantle boundary topography and its relation to the viscosity structure of the lowermost mantle

•Lateral flow along the core-mantle boundary pushes hot material towards the LLSVPs.•This flow induces plumes and high pressure at the edges of the thermochemical piles.•The pressure causes ∼120 km wide topographic depressions around high-viscosity piles.•Depth and asymmetry of this topographic feat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Earth and planetary science letters 2020-08, Vol.543, p.116358, Article 116358
Hauptverfasser: Heyn, Björn H., Conrad, Clinton P., Trønnes, Reidar G.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Lateral flow along the core-mantle boundary pushes hot material towards the LLSVPs.•This flow induces plumes and high pressure at the edges of the thermochemical piles.•The pressure causes ∼120 km wide topographic depressions around high-viscosity piles.•Depth and asymmetry of this topographic feature constrain the viscosity contrast.•Short-scale topography may help to identify regions of active plume initiation. Two large areas of anomalously low seismic velocities are visible in all tomographic models of the lowermost mantle. Depending on the density structure of these Large Low Shear Velocity Provinces (LLSVPs), the core-mantle boundary (CMB) will deform upwards or downwards due to isostatic and dynamic topography, the latter being sensitive to the viscosity structure of the lowermost mantle. Heterogeneities in the viscosity structure, although difficult to constrain, might be especially important if the LLSVPs are thermochemical piles with elevated intrinsic viscosity as suggested by mineral physics. Based on numerical models, we identify a short-wavelength (about 80-120 km wide, up to a few km deep) topographic depression that forms around the pile edges if the pile is more viscous than the surrounding mantle. The depression forms when a wedge of thermal boundary layer material becomes compressed against the viscous pile, and is enhanced by relative uplift of the CMB beneath the pile by plumes rising above it. The depth and asymmetry of the depression constrain the magnitude of the viscosity contrast between pile and the surrounding mantle. Furthermore, (periodic) plume initiation and pile collapse at the pile margin systematically modify the characteristic depression, with a maximum in asymmetry and depth at the time of plume initiation. Core-reflected waves or scattered energy may be used to detect this topographic signature of stiff thermochemical piles at the base of the mantle.
ISSN:0012-821X
1385-013X
DOI:10.1016/j.epsl.2020.116358