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Lithospheric Mechanics

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Rock Rheology (2.3) Relevant mantle rheological behavior. Rheology of continental crust. Elastic-perfectly plastic. Strain hardening and strain softening ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lithospheric Mechanics


1
  • Chapter2
  • Lithospheric Mechanics
  • This presentation contains illustrations from
    Allen and Allen (2005 )
  • and Press et al. (2004)

2
Physical State of the Lithosphere
  • Key Concepts
  • Surface Forces
  • Local Isostasy
  • Flexural isostasy
  • Thermal conductivity
  • Thermal Expansion
  • Heat transfer A special case
  • Rock Rheology (2.3)
  • Relevant mantle rheological behavior
  • Rheology of continental crust
  • Elastic-perfectly plastic
  • Strain hardening and strain softening

3
  • Key Concepts
  • Lithostatic stress(CA), deviatoric stress(TA),
    uniaxial stress, plane stress
  • bulk modulus(MB),flexural rigidity(JTB)
  • thermal conductivity(AD), geotherm(SE)
  • Geoid(HF), Bouguer anomalies(TJH)
  • Isostasy(CJ)
  • diffusion and dislocation creep(AL), Byerlees
    Law(CP)
  • (one per student --- e-mail me your answer
    written in PowerPoint slide one illustration and
    two sentences worth 1 point for final, due
    Tuesday 12, September e-mail to me)

4
Surface (not surficial!) forces in geology
  • We measure these forces of gravity and reaction
    to gravity not in terms of Newtons but by using
    the concept of stress, in Newtons per meter
    square, or Pascals. (See structural geology
    notes).
  • What is atmospheric pressure?
  • What is the hydrostatic state of stress?

5
Lithostatic stress
  • 1 cu. meter of water weighs 1000 kg x 10m/s2 or
    10000 Newtons (N)
  • 1 cu meter creates 10000N/m2 (Pa) of pressure at
    its bas
  • 10 meters of water depth produces 100000 Pa (1
    atm) of 0.1 MPa, that is every 10 m you dive
    down, pressure  increases  by 1 atm.  1000
    vertically stacked 1-m-cubes of water weigh 10
    million Newtons  1000 m (1 km) of stacked
    1-m-cubes of water create 10 million Pascals (Pa)
    or 10 MPa at its base

6
Lithostatic stress
  • If the above is true, then under 1 km of  mud
    (2200 kg/m3) there should be about 22 MPa of
    pressure then under 30 km of granite (2670 kg/m3)
    there should be 801 MPa, or .8 GPa The rule to
    convert density into MPa of pressure per km is to
    take the density of the material in g/cc, move
    the decimal point over one space and change the
    units to MPa Other useful conversions to know
    are To get MPa from psi mutliply Pounds/sq in
    by 0.689 x 10 -2 To get psi from MPa multiply
    MPa by 145.05 To convert  to MegaPascals....
    Divide by 1000000 Pa per 1 MPa

7
Lithostatic stress
  • If you think you understand the previous slide,
    then answer the following question On Planet
    Zog the average density of the 10 km-thick crust
    is 2500 kg m-3 . Acceleration due to gravity is
    3.2 m s-2 . What is the pressure at the base of
    the crust?   A. 80 MegaPascals   B. 80
    Newtons   C. 800 Newtons   D. 3 GigaPascals
      E. 30 Gigapascals   F. None of the above

8
  • Lithostatic stress is responsible for the
    increase of pressure with overall depth in the
    earth but it is the differential stress that
    creates the faults and folds.

9
  • What is the vertical lithostatic stress gradient
    in granitic crust? What is the vertical stress
    gradient in the first 2 km of the ocean?

10
Faults can develop
(Side view)
(Side View)
(Birds Eye View)
11
Brittle faults can develop
(Side view)
(Side View)
(Birds Eye View)
12
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13
Sea of Galilea
Dead Sea
14
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15
What is the direction of directed pressure
(maximum principal stress direction)? How many
orientations of faults can be generated for the
same directed pressure direction??
16
Physical State of the Lithosphere
  • Key Concepts
  • Surface Forces
  • Local Isostasy
  • Flexural isostasy
  • Thermal conductivity
  • Thermal Expansion
  • Heat transfer A special case
  • Rock Rheology
  • Relevant mantle rheological behavior
  • Rheology of continental crust
  • Elastic-perfectly plastic
  • Strain hardening and strain softening

17
Surface Forces (Pressure)- LOCAL ISOSTASY
Depth of compensation
18
Isostasy or Archimedes Principle
  • states that the crust, mantle can float above the
    underlying material
  • If the crust and mantle float then there exists a
    depth at which pressuer above and pressure below
    are equal.
  • This surface is known as the compensation depth

19
General recommendations for local isostatic
calculations
  • (1) Define a surface of compensation
  • (2) Define a reference column of crust and mantle
  • (3) Compare the weight of the reference column
    with the unknown
  • (4) Simplify algebra in terms of two unknowns
  • (4) Keep physical units the same
  • See syllabus (Tuesday, 19 September) for
    elaborated examples

20
Isostasy homework due Thursday, 21 2006
  • Derive the relation between basin-floor depth and
    Moho depth.
  • Assuming that underneath Lake Baikal the
    continental crust and mantle is homogeneous,
    calculate the expected thickness of continental
    crust.
  • Same for the continental shelf of the Gulf of
    Mexico
  • Show all your work type it up and e-mail it to me

21
Physical State of the Lithosphere
  • Key Concepts
  • Surface Forces
  • Local Isostasy
  • Flexural isostasy
  • Thermal conductivity
  • Thermal Expansion
  • Heat transfer A special case
  • Rock Rheology
  • Relevant mantle rheological behavior
  • Rheology of continental crust
  • Elastic-perfectly plastic
  • Strain hardening and strain softening

22
Flexure of the lithosphere
  • The outer skin of the earth down to depths where
    the temperature is cool enough and rock
    properties permit the earth can be visualized to
    be effectively elastic (e.g., rubber ball) over
    long periods of time, i.e., hundreds of millions
    of years.

23
  • A conclusion is that mountain belts will not sag
    over time but will maintain their mechanical
    strength indefinitely for practical purposes. A
    measure of the strength of the crust is how much
    it bends to a given load. This value is known as
    the flexural rigidity (D units of Nm)

Nm is equivalent to about 34 km of elastic
thickness (Te) or moderately strong elastic
lithosphere
24
One view on flexure in basins
  • Use local isostasy as a reference
  • Assume stationary conditions
  • Deviation from this reference is a measure of
    internal strength balanced against an applied load

25
Measure of elasticity
If the load is exceptionally narrow and small
then the lithosphere will appear (infinitely)
very strong because it does not give way at all
to the load!
  • But, if we use the other extreme case . the case
    of a weight that is very wide (i.e. gt 1000
    km)..?????
  • When it is very wide the condition reaches that
    of local isostasy and all the weight pushing down
    is balanced by the reaction of the mantle pushing
    up.

26

27


28


29


30


















31
Finite (reasonable and not extreme) geological
load
versus infinite (very wide) load
32
Maximum depth of subsidence of the base of the
crust in the case that the load is very wide and
that hydrostatic compensation is local i.e. some
the elastic lithosphere has no internal strength.
Now compare the case where the load is relatively
narrow.
33
Point load
versus infinite (very wide) load
34
Now compare the case where the load is relatively
narrow and the strength of the lithosphere
becomes apparent.
Point load
versus infinite (very wide) load
35

-( Strength of elastic lithosphere)
(weight)
36
Downward directed invisible load creates space
that fills with water and adds more vertical load
Use reference at infinity (very far away) and
pressure at level of compensation. At level of
compensation pressures are in equilibrium.
Level of compensation
g(h.rhom hw. rhow w .rhom)
37
(At infinity)
g(h.rhom hw. rhow w .rhom)
(Under load)
qa (Point load) g(w.rhow hw.rhow
h.rhom)-internal resistance to bending
38
g(h.rhom hw. rhow w .rhom)
qa (Point load) g(whw) rhow h.rhom)
internal resistance to bending
If there is internal strength in the lithosphere,
then hw will not be as deep as it should be
because the oceanic lithosphere resists!
39
(Under load)
(At infinity)
qa (Point load) g( (whw).rhow h.rhom)
internal resistance to bending
g(h.rhom hw. rhow w .rhom)
internal resistance to bending g (rhom-rhow)
w
qa (Point load)
Equation 2.28
Equation 2.28
40
Physical State of the Lithosphere
  • Key Concepts
  • Surface Forces
  • Local Isostasy
  • Flexural isostasy
  • Thermal conductivity
  • Thermal Expansion
  • Heat transfer A special case
  • Rock Rheology
  • Relevant mantle rheological behavior
  • - Rheology of continental crust
  • Elastic-perfectly plastic
  • Strain hardening and strain softening

41
Thermal conductivity measures how well
  • for a given temperature gradient, conductive
    heat transfers moves through rock. Heat moves
    from higher temperature to areas of lower
    temperature.
  • Halite 7 kW/m/ºK
  • Shale 3 kW /m/ºK

42
Thermal conductivity
  • The efficiency of that transfer is the thermal
    conductivity. So, for a given temperature
    gradient dT/dz (continental or oceanic
    geotherms) the amount of heat being passed across
    any given portion of the earths surface (heat
    flux-Q) per unit time will depend on the
    coefficient of thermal conductivity (K).
  • Fouriers Law

Q for continents is 60 mW/m2 or 60W/1000 m2 Q
for continents is 80 mW/m2
43
Geotherm
  • Temperature variation with depth in solid crust
    indicates how much heat is flows from the mantle,
    and how much heat is generated within the crust.

Q- heat flow K- conductivity A- internal heat
generation Z -depth
44
Geotherm
Temperature
oceanic
z
continent
45
Heat Production versus depth
Heat production at surface (Hs )is maximum
H eat production Hs exp (-z/ar)
46
Heat production
Z Depth(km)
47
Geotherms
  • Surface heat flow observations indicate that heat
    flow increases linearly with the heat production
    of surface rocks. This is mathematically
    accomplished by assuming that heat production
    decreases with depth in an exponential manner.

ar is the depth at which heat production is
halved A0 is the surface heat production
48
Global heat production
  • Continental surface heat flow comes about 50
    from the mantle (U,K,Th) and about 50 from
    radioactive sources.
  • Heat flow was x2 what it is now, about 3 billion
    years ago
  • Oceanic heat flow largely depends on thermal age
    of the lithosphere and not on the radioactivity

49
Sampling thermal conductivity
On board R/V Joides Resolution, Leg 150 New
Jersey Margin, US Atlantic Coast, B. Hoppie
(right) (MNSU, Mankato), C. Fulthorpe(left) (UT
Austin)
50
Thermal conductivity
  • We can measure thermal conductivity with respect
    to standards as you can see in this overhead of a
    thermal conductivity measurements on board Leg
    ODP 150 New Jersey Margin in the summer of 1993.
    People are (L toR) Bryce Hoppie and Craig
    Fulthorpe. These needles contain heaters and
    temperature sensors. These needles measure the
    speed at which the temperature changes over time
    to calculate the conductivity of the material
    into which they are inserted.

51
Physical State of the Lithosphere
  • Key Concepts
  • Surface Forces
  • Local Isostasy
  • Flexural isostasy
  • Thermal conductivity
  • Thermal Expansion
  • Heat transfer A special case
  • Rock Rheology (2.3)
  • Relevant mantle rheological behavior
  • Rheology of continental crust
  • Elastic-perfectly plastic
  • Strain hardening and strain softening

52
Thermal Expansion
  • At a constant pressure, the average silicate rock
    will expand 1/100,000 th of its entire length for
    every degree that it goes up in temperature.
    This of course affects the density of the rock.
  • The amount that the rock contracts or expands, at
    an assumed constant pressure, for a given
    temperature change is known as the thermal
    expansion coefficient, or the volumetric
    coefficient of thermal expansion, written as

53
Thermal expansion
  • 100,000 m 10-5 1ºK 1m/ºK

54
Thermal contraction
  • The converse is true as well. for every degree
    that temperature drops, the lithosphere will
    contract 1/100,000 th of its entire length

55
Thermal contraction
Start (at time0)
After 200 my
1300º
1300º
O km
125 km
56
Thermal contraction
  • So, a 125-km piece of mantle that is initially
    at, say 1300ºK, and which then cools by an
    average of about 650ºK will shrink by how much
    ..?

57
Choose an answer
  • (a) 2km
  • (b) 4 km
  • (c) 10 km
  • (d) 20 km
  • (e) none of the above

58
Answer
  • 125,000 m 650ºC 10-5 812 m

59
Isostatic consequences of cooling mantle
  • If the mantle contracts as it cools it also
    becomes denser for doing so.
  • Final density original density thermal
    expansion coefficient (temperature drop)

60
Physical State of the Lithosphere
  • Key Concepts
  • Surface Forces
  • Local Isostasy
  • Flexural isostasy
  • Thermal conductivity
  • Thermal Expansion
  • Heat transfer A special case
  • Rock Rheology
  • Relevant mantle rheological behavior
  • Rheology of continental crust
  • Elastic-perfectly plastic
  • Strain hardening and strain softening

61
Time-dependent heat conduction
  • We observe that
  • heat flow decreases away from the mid-ocean
    ridges as a function of age and
  • water depth increases as a function of age

62
Heat flow versus age
63
Plate Model for Sea-floor spreadin
  • Parsons and Sclater

64
Temperature and thickness versus age
65
Physical State of the Lithosphere
  • Key Concepts
  • Surface Forces
  • Local Isostasy
  • Flexural isostasy
  • Thermal conductivity
  • Thermal Expansion
  • Heat transfer A special case
  • Rock Rheology
  • Relevant mantle rheological behavior
  • - Rheology of continental crust
  • Elastic-perfectly plastic
  • Strain hardening and strain softening

66
At least 6 factors control how rock deforms e.g.
at shallow depth a rock may fracture whereas at
depth it may flow. Factors are (1) rock type (2)
Confining and directed pressure (3)
temperature (4) Fluids (5) Time (6) Rate of
deformation
67
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68
Physical State of the Lithosphere
  • Key Concepts
  • Surface Forces
  • Local Isostasy
  • Flexural isostasy
  • Thermal conductivity
  • Thermal Expansion
  • Heat transfer A special case
  • Rock Rheology
  • Relevant mantle rheological behavior
  • Rheology of continental crust
  • Elastic-perfectly plastic
  • Strain hardening and strain softening

69
Mantle viscosityModels
  • Diffusion creep
  • Very Low stress
  • Newtonian fluid
  • Atoms diffuse

Viscosity depends on stress and temperature
70
Mantle viscosity
  • High stress creep
  • Disclocation creep
  • Model for mantle plasticity

Power Law Creep
Q is activation energy A is a creep mechanism
parameter
71
Dislocation Creep
  • Temperature-activated creep
  • Movement of mantle by microfractures at the
    subcrystal scale and synchronous healing of these
    imperfections

72
Physical State of the Lithosphere
  • Key Concepts
  • Surface Forces
  • Local Isostasy
  • Flexural isostasy
  • Thermal conductivity
  • Thermal Expansion
  • Heat transfer A special case
  • Rock Rheology
  • Relevant mantle rheological behavior
  • Rheology of continental crust
  • Elastic-perfectly plastic
  • Strain hardening and strain softening

73
Rheology of continental crust
74
Byerlees Law
  • Linear relation between shear stress and normal
    stress for rock strength

Shear stress
Normal stress
75
Physical State of the Lithosphere
  • Key Concepts
  • Surface Forces
  • Local Isostasy
  • Flexural isostasy
  • Thermal conductivity
  • Thermal Expansion
  • Heat transfer A special case
  • Rock Rheology
  • Relevant mantle rheological behavior
  • Rheology of continental crust
  • Elastic-perfectly plastic
  • Strain hardening and strain softening

76
Elastic-Plastic model for breaking Rock
strain
stress
strain
77
Strain hardening
strain
stress
strain
78
Strain softening
strain
stress
strain
79
Elastic-plastic
stress
strain
80
Dislocation Creep (AL)-
  • Thermally activated deformation that occurs at
    relatively higher shear stress than diffusion
    creep. Diffusion creep happens at very small
    scales (atomic and molecular), and the
    crystalline solid flows as a Newtonian fluid.
    Dislocation creep happens at larger scales and
    causes the solid to exhibit non-Newtonian
    behavior because of the higher shear stress.

81
Elastic-plastic
stress
strain
82
Elastic-plastic
stress
strain
83
Elastic-plastic
stress
strain
84
Diffusion Creep (RR)
  • Diffusion is the propagation of cracks in a
    crystal structure in response to stress where the
    parting goes from an area of high stress to low
    stress. Diffusion Creep is the movement of atoms
    along partings from areas of high stress to low
    stress creating foliations.

85
Lithostatic Stress C.A.
  • The stress applied to a rock in equal directions
    due to the weight of an overlying rock column. At
    the surface of the earth the lithostatic stress
    would be zero, but as you move further below the
    earth's surface the weight of the overlying rock
    causes an increase in stress.

Source http//myweb.cwpost.liu.edu/vdivener/notes
/stress-strain.htm
86
Bouguer Anomalies (TJH)
  • The difference between measurements of gravity
    based on the value used by a theoretical model of
    what it should be at that latitudinal position,
    and a different value that compensate for
    latitude, elevation, free-air corrections, and
    Bouguer correction.
  • Developed be Pierre Bouguer proved that gravity
    differs with elevation

87
Bulk Modulus (K) (MB)
The ratio of pressure change (?P) to volume
change (?V)
K ?P/ ?V
This describes a materials ability to resist
changes in volume
88
Deviatoric Stress (TA)
  • A condition in which the stress components
    operating at a point in a body are not the same
    in every direction.
  • Is the difference between the mean stress (Sum of
    stress in three directions divided by 3) and
    total stress

89
Geotherm (SE)The variation of temperature with
depth.
  • Major Influences
  • Thermal Conductivity
  • Concentration of Radiogenic Elements
  • Temperature at Surface
  • Proximity to Magma or other Heat Sources

Eugene Island Field Gulf of Mexico
90
Thermal Conductivity (AD)
  • Heat transfer is achieved by processes of
  • Conduction- a diffusive process in which kinetic
    energy is transferred by intermolecular
    collisions. Conduction is the primary thermal
    process in the lithosphere.
  • Convection- requires motion of the medium to
    transmit heat. Convection of heat from the core
    is the principal thermal process of the mantle.
  • Electromagnetic radiation- only important in
    determining surface heat budget, not the internal
    heat budget

91
Fouriers Law
  • Fouriers Law is the central relation for
    conductive heat transport
  • It states that the heat flux Q is directly
    proportional to the temperature gradient
  • Q -K (dT / dy)
  • K coefficient of thermal conductivity
  • T temperature at a given point in the medium
  • y coordinate in the direction of the
    temperature variation

92
Continental Crust
  • Generally, regions of high heat flow correspond
    to active volcanic zones or regions of
    extensional tectonics.
  • Areas of continental collision are related to low
    or normal surface heat flows.

93
Oceanic Crust
  • The surface heat flow of the oceans is related to
    the age of the seafloor rather than the
    concentration of radioisotopes.
  • Newly created oceanic crust cools by conduction
    as it travels away from the mid-ocean ridge.
  • About 60 of the Earths heat loss takes place
    through the ocean floor.

94
One-Dimensional Heat Conduction
  • Temperature change of a piece of lithosphere has
    3 components
  • These components are a basal heat flow term, an
    internal heat generation term, and an advective
    term

95
Advective Heat Flow
  • Advective heat flow can be one of two things.
  • It can be movement towards the surface associated
    with downcutting action of erosion, or the
    velocity of deposition.

96
Uniaxial stress(MS)
  • Uniaxial stress is stress in only one direction
    and zero stress in the perpendicular direction.
    This XYZ graph shows that there is only stress in
    the Y direction, both X and Z directions show a
    stress of Zero.

97
(TB) Definition taken from http//en.wikipedia.o
rg/wiki/Flexural_rigidity
  • Flexural rigidity is defined as the force couple
    required to bend a rigid structure to a unit
    curvature.
  • The thin lithosphere plates which cover the
    surface of the Earth are subject to flexure, when
    a load or force is applied to them. On a
    geological timescale, the lithosphere behaves
    elastically and can therefore bend under loading
    by mountain chains, volcanoes and so on.
  • The flexure of the plate depends on
  • The plate thickness
  • The elastic properties of the plate
  • The applied load or force

98
North pole is up black line runs through
Greenwich
  • Geoid (HF)

GEOID a surface on which the earths
gravitational forces are equal everywhere and
coincides with mean sea-level. Based on these
concepts - sea covered the earth
- no disturbing forces like winds, tides,
ocean currents, ect.
- the force of gravity is
perpendicular to the geoid everywhere.
  • - Ellipsoid represents the bulk shape of the
    earth.
  • Geoid departs above or below the ellipsoid
    resulting in a smoother representation of
    the earths actual surface.
  • For more info http//www.answers.com/topic/geoid,
    http//solid_earth.ou.edu/notes/geoid/earths_geoi
    d.htm

H. FOLEY
99
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