Multidisciplinary Constraints on the Thermal‐Chemical Boundary Between Earth's Core and Mantle

Heat flux from the core to the mantle provides driving energy for mantle convection thus powering plate tectonics, and contributes a significant fraction of the geothermal heat budget. Indirect estimates of core‐mantle boundary heat flow are typically based on petrological evidence of mantle tempera...

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Veröffentlicht in:Geochemistry, geophysics, geosystems : G3 geophysics, geosystems : G3, 2022-03, Vol.23 (3), p.n/a
Hauptverfasser: Frost, Daniel A., Avery, Margaret S., Buffett, Bruce A., Chidester, Bethany A., Deng, Jie, Dorfman, Susannah M., Li, Zhi, Liu, Lijun, Lv, Mingda, Martin, Joshua F.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Heat flux from the core to the mantle provides driving energy for mantle convection thus powering plate tectonics, and contributes a significant fraction of the geothermal heat budget. Indirect estimates of core‐mantle boundary heat flow are typically based on petrological evidence of mantle temperature, interpretations of temperatures indicated by seismic travel times, experimental measurements of mineral melting points, physical mantle convection models, or physical core convection models. However, previous estimates have not consistently integrated these lines of evidence. In this work, an interdisciplinary analysis is applied to co‐constrain core‐mantle boundary heat flow and test the thermal boundary layer (TBL) theory. The concurrence of TBL models, energy balance to support geomagnetism, seismology, and review of petrologic evidence for historic mantle temperatures supports QCMB ∼15 TW, with all except geomagnetism supporting as high as ∼20 TW. These values provide a tighter constraint on core heat flux relative to previous work. Our work describes the seismic properties consistent with a TBL, and supports a long‐lived basal mantle molten layer through much of Earth's history. Key Points Interdisciplinary analysis of core‐mantle boundary heat flow converges on 15 TW No clear evidence for lower core heat flow in the past suggests long‐lived hot core‐mantle boundary Presence of thermal boundary layer close to detection limit for seismology
ISSN:1525-2027
1525-2027
DOI:10.1029/2021GC009764