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Temperature, composition, and strength variability of the Australian lithosphere

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Tesauro,  Magdala
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Kaban,  M. K.
1.3 Earth System Modelling, 1.0 Geodesy, Departments, GFZ Publication Database, Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum;

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Petrunin,  A. G.
1.3 Earth System Modelling, 1.0 Geodesy, Departments, GFZ Publication Database, Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum;

Aitken,  A.
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Zitation

Tesauro, M., Kaban, M. K., Petrunin, A. G., Aitken, A. (2019): Temperature, composition, and strength variability of the Australian lithosphere, (Geophysical Research Abstracts Vol. 21, EGU2019-5870, 2019), General Assembly European Geosciences Union (Vienna 2019).


Zitierlink: https://gfzpublic.gfz-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_4504896
Zusammenfassung
The Australian plate has a long and complex tectonic history. The continental crust was accreted in three majorepisodes from the Archean cratons in the west to the Phanerozoic provinces in the east. The crust and upper mantleof Australia have been deeply investigated in the last two decades using a variety of geophysical methods. To dis-cern temperature and compositional variations in the Australian upper mantle, we apply an integrative technique,which jointly interprets seismic tomography and gravity data. In the first stage, we removed the effect of the crustfrom the observed gravity field and topography. In the second step, an initial thermal model has been constructedby inverting the seismic tomography model AusREM (http://rses.anu.edu.au/seismology/AuSREM/index.php),assuming a laterally and vertically uniform “fertile” mantle composition. After removing the effect of thetemperature variations from the total mantle anomalies, the residual “compositional” fields are obtained. Theresidual mantle gravity field and residual topography are inverted to obtain a 3-D density model of the uppermantle, which is supplementary to the initial thermally induced density variations. These density anomalies wereused to improve the initial thermal and compositional models by applying an iterative approach to account forthe effect of composition on the thermal model. The results obtained show that the Precambrian West and NorthAustralian Craton (WAC and NAC) each possess thick, relatively cool, lithosphere that has depleted composition(Mg# > 90). This observation is stronger in the older WAC than the younger NAC. Substantially hotter and lessdense lithosphere is seen fringing the eastern and southeastern margin of the continent, resolving the thermalperturbation of these regions in response to Mesozoic and Cenozoic events.Furthermore, we used the surface heat flow values recently published and the most updated crustal model ofAustralia (AusREM) to estimate temperature distribution in the crust, assuming steady state conditions, and weused the results obtained together with the mantle thermal model to construct two alternative models of strengthand effective elastic thickness (EET) of the lithosphere. The first model (Model I) assumes a constant value of 10−15 s−1for the strain rates. In the second model (Model II), we used the strain rates obtained from a global mantleflow model. In both models we assumed a stiff rheology, on account of the mafic composition of the Australiancrust. The results of Model II show larger variability of the rigidity of the plate within the cratonic areas, reflectingthe long tectonic history of the Australian plate. On the other hand, the younger eastern terranes are uniformlyweak, due to the higher temperatures.