Title: Lithospheric%20Plates
1Lithospheric Plates
- The lithosphere can be defined thermally by an
isotherm at the base of the lithosphere which
should be around 1350oC. - Mantle rocks below this isotherm are cool and
behave rigidly - Rocks above this isotherm are hotter and may
deform - How are plates created ?
2Heat Flow Through the Oceanic Lithosphere
Thermal Conductivity profiles in sediments
- Measuring heat flow on the seafloor
3Heat Flow Through the Oceanic Lithosphere
- Heat flow measurements on the seafloor are found
to decrease steadily with increasing distance
from the spreading center. - Deviations from a theoretical curve for heat
flow indicate complications such as hydrothermal
circulation.
4Heat Flow Above the Oceanic Lithosphere
- Heat flow is highest for what age lithosphere ?
- How does heat flow vary with seafloor age ? Is
it linear ? - What kind of mathematical expression does this
resemble ?
- On a log-log plot, the data falls on a slope of
-1/2. How can you express this in an equation ?
5Heat Flow Above the Oceanic Lithosphere
log Q log A -1/2
- Heat flow is inversely proportional to
the square root of age (time). - Lithosphere is defined by heat flow
- Why does heat flow decrease with age ?
6Depth of the Lithosphere (Topography or
Bathymetry)
- Sonar techniques taken from ships passing over
the ocean surface measure the water depth to the
seafloor with excellent accuracy (at least within
a few meters).
7Depth of the Lithosphere (Topography or
Bathymetry)
- Seafloor bathymetry across a spreading ridge is
shown here. - Do you notice any differences between the
Atlantic (A) and Pacific (E) spreading centers ? - What causes these differences ?
8Depth of the Lithosphere
- The depth to the seafloor (from sea level) is
not constant...
- The seafloor is shallow at the rise axis and
gets deeper away from it. - Why is this ?
9Depth of the Lithosphere
- Plotting seafloor depth versus the sqrt(Age)
shows a slope of -1/3 regardless of spreading
rate ! - How can we write the equation that describes this
?
d -1/3 sqrt(A) (1)
d is proportional to sqrt(A)
-or sqrt(time)
d sqrt(t)
- The lithosphere is described by it's depth in
the ocean - What does this mean ?
10Depth of the Lithosphere
- The lithosphere can be described by conductive
cooling - Other factors have a smaller effect (upwelling
volcanism at spreading axis etc...) - How does thermal conductivity vary over time ?
- The time-dependent heat conduction equation
(notes on in class and on board)
11Class notes on board...
12Time-Dependent Heat Conduction
dT/dt ? d2T/dx2
(Known as the Heat flow Equation)
- ?Where ??? k/?Cp is thermal
diffusivity (m2/s). - ? describes the diffusion of temperature or
heat across a body of material
13Time-Dependent Heat Conduction
dT/dt ? d2T/dx2
- ?Charcteristic diffusion time (t) can be
described using ? where
t d2/?
- This gives the time for heat to diffuse across a
distance, d.
14Time-Dependent Heat Conduction
dT/dt ? d2T/dx2
- ?Charcteristic diffusion distance (d) can be
described using ? where - This gives the distance temperature will
propogate through the material in a given time
period.
d sqrt(??t?
15Time-Dependent Heat Conduction
dT/dt ? d2T/dx2
- ?Charcteristic diffusion distance (d) can be
described using ? where - This gives the distance temperature will
propogate through the material in a given time
period.
d sqrt(??t?
16Activity
- P wave tomography image of the Tonga trench
subduction zone - High velocity subducting slab is clearly visible
(blue) extending down to at least 660 km depth.
17Activity
- Seismic tomography image of the Pacific plate
subducting beneath Japan. - Scientists argue about whether subducting plates
penetrate through the 660 km discontinuity into
the lower mantle.
18Activity
- Some authors say some slabs just rest at the 660
and may thermally assimilate over time. - Calculate how long it would take such a slab to
thermally assimilate. - Use the thickness of the slab you observe in the
images above - Assume thermal conductivity of peridotite, k
3.0 Wm-1K-1, density 3250 kg m-3, and heat
capacity, Cp 0.8 kJ/kg K