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Chapter 24 - The nature and cause of mantle heterogeneity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Don L. Anderson
Affiliation:
California Institute of Technology
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Summary

The right to search for truth implies also a duty. One must not conceal any part of what one has discovered to be true.

Albert Einstein

Overview

The lithosphere clearly controls the location of volcanism. The nature and volume of the volcanism and the presence of ‘melting anomalies’ or ‘hotspots,’ however, reflect the intrinsic chemical and petrologic heterogeneity of the upper mantle. Melting anomalies – shallow regions of ridges, volcanic chains, flood basalts, radial dike swarms – and continental breakup are frequently attributed to the impingement of deep mantle thermal plumes on the base of the lithosphere. The heat required for volcanism in the plume hypothesis is from the core; plumes from the deep mantle create upper mantle heterogeneity. This violates the dictum of good Earth science: never go for a deep complex explanation if a shallow simple one will do.

Mantle fertility and melting point variations, ponding, focusing and edge effects, i.e. plate tectonic and near-surface phenomena, may control the volumes and rates of magmatism. The magnitude of magmatism may reflect the fertility and homologous temperature, not the absolute temperature, of the asthenosphere. The chemical and isotopic heterogeneity of the mantle is, in part, due to recycling and, in part, due to igneous processes internal to the mantle. The fertility and fertility heterogeneity of the upper mantle are due to subduction of young plates, aseismic ridges and seamount chains, and to delamination of the lower continental crust, as discussed in Part II.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2007

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