Redox-influenced seismic properties of upper-mantle olivine

Nature ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 555 (7696) ◽  
pp. 355-358 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. J. Cline II ◽  
U. H. Faul ◽  
E. C. David ◽  
A. J. Berry ◽  
I. Jackson
Lithos ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 77 (1-4) ◽  
pp. 493-510 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.G. Kopylova ◽  
J. Lo ◽  
N.I. Christensen

2006 ◽  
Vol 428 (1-4) ◽  
pp. 65-85 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierre Vonlanthen ◽  
Karsten Kunze ◽  
Luigi Burlini ◽  
Bernard Grobety

2021 ◽  
pp. M56-2020-16
Author(s):  
V. Chatzaras ◽  
S. C. Kruckenberg

AbstractWe report on the petrology, microstructure, and seismic properties of 44 peridotite xenoliths extracted from the upper mantle beneath Marie Byrd Land (MBL), West Antarctica. The aim of this work is to understand how melt-rock reaction, refertilization, and deformation affected the seismic properties (velocities, anisotropy) of the West Antarctic upper mantle, in the context of MBL tectonic evolution and West Antarctic Rift System formation. Modal compositions, mineral major element compositions, microstructures, and crystallographic preferred orientations (CPOs) provide evidence for diachronous reactive melt percolation and refertilization. Olivine shows three main CPO patterns, the A-type, axial-[010], and axial-[100] texture types. Average seismic properties of the MBL mantle lithosphere are mainly controlled by the strength of olivine crystallographic texture. Reactive melt percolation and refertilization likely modified seismic velocities and anisotropy, as is suggested by a systematic decrease in maximum P-wave and S-wave anisotropies with increasing modal abundance of pyroxene. At larger spatial scales, the seismic properties of the MBL mantle xenoliths are dominated by the anisotropy resulting from the A-type olivine CPO. Variations between individual volcanic centers, however, attest to spatial variations in the mantle structure, potentially related to 3-D deformation and the prolonged tectonic history of MBL.Supplementary material at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.5315261


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tongzhang Qu ◽  
Ian Jackson ◽  
Ulrich Faul

<p>Although the seismic properties of polycrystalline olivine have been the subject of systematic and comprehensive study at seismic frequencies, the role of orthopyroxene as the major secondary phase in the shallow parts of the Earth’s upper mantle has so far received little attention. Accordingly, we have newly prepared synthetic melt-free polycrystalline specimens containing different proportions of olivine (Ol, Fo<sub>90</sub>) and orthopyroxene (Opx, En<sub>90</sub>) by the solution-gelation method. The resulting specimens, ranging in composition between Ol<sub>95</sub>Opx<sub>5</sub> and Ol<sub>5</sub>Opx<sub>95</sub> composition, were mechanically tested by torsional forced oscillation at temperatures of 1200 ºC to 400 ºC accessed during staged cooling under a confining pressure of 200 MPa. The microstructures of tested specimens were evaluated by BSE, EBSD and TEM. The forced-oscillation data, i.e. shear modulus and associated strain-energy dissipation at 1-1000 s period, were closely fitted by a model based on an extended Burgers-type creep function. This model was also required to fit data from previous ultrasonic and Brillouin spectroscopic measurements at ns-µs periods. Within the observational window (1-1000 s), the shear modulus and dissipation vary monotonically with period and temperature for each of the tested specimens, which is broadly comparable with that previously reported for olivine-only samples. There is no evidence of the superimposed dissipation peak reported by Sundberg and Cooper (2010) for an Ol<sub>60</sub>Opx<sub>40</sub> specimen prepared from natural precursor materials and containing a melt fraction of 1.5%. The higher orthopyroxene concentrations are associated with systematically somewhat lower levels of dissipation and corresponding weaker modulus dispersion. The new findings suggest that the olivine-based model for high-temperature viscoelasticity in upper-mantle olivine requires only modest modification to accommodate the role of orthopyroxene, including appropriate compositional dependence of the unrelaxed modulus and its temperature derivative.</p>


Author(s):  
A. M. Walker ◽  
J. Hermann ◽  
A. J. Berry ◽  
H. St. C. O'Neill
Keyword(s):  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document