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Composition, Deep Structure and Evolution of Continents

✍ Scribed by R.D. van der Hilst and W.F. McDonough (Eds.)


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Leaves
355
Series
Developments in Geotectonics 24
Edition
1
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


The ensemble of manuscripts presented in this special volume captures the stimulating cross-disciplinary dialogue from the International Symposium on Deep Structure, Composition, and Evolution of Continents, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 15-17 October 1997. It will provide an update on recent research developments and serve as a starting point for research of the many outstanding issues.After its formation at mid-oceanic spreading centers, oceanic lithosphere cools, thickens, and subsides, until it subducts into the deep mantle beneath convergent margins. As a result of this continuous recycling process oceanic lithosphere is typically less than 200 million years old (the global average is about 80 Myr).A comprehensive, multi-disciplinary study of continents involves a wide range of length scales: tiny rock samples and diamond inclusions may yield isotope and trace element signatures diagnostic for the formation age and evolution of (parts of) cratons, while geophysical techniques (e.g., seismic and electromagnetic imaging) constrain variations of elastic and conductive properties over length scales ranging from several to many thousand kilometers. Integrating and reconciling this information is far from trivial and, as several papers in this volume document, the relationships between, for instance, formation age and tectonic behavior on the one hand and the seismic signature, heat flow, and petrology on the other may not be uniform but may vary both within as well as between cratons. These observations complicate attempts to determine the variations of one particular observable (e.g., heat flow, lithosphere thickness) as a function of another(e.g., crustal age) on the basis of global data compilations and tectonic regionalizations.Important conclusions of the work presented here are that (1) continental deformation, for instance shortening, is not restricted to the crust but also involves the lithospheric mantle; (2) the high wavespeed part of continental lithospheric mantle is probably thinner than inferred previously from vertically travelling body waves or form global surface-wave models; and (3) the seismic signature of ancient continents is more complex than expected from a uniform relationship with crustal age.

✦ Table of Contents


Content:
Preface: Composition, deep structure and evolution of continents
Pages ix-xii
Rob van der Hilst, Bill McDonough

Seismic imaging of lithospheric discontinuities and continental evolution Original Research Article
Pages 1-16
M.G. Bostock

The deep structure of the Australian continent from surface wave tomography Original Research Article
Pages 17-43
Frederik J. Simons, Alet Zielhuis, Rob D. van der Hilst

Velocity structure of the continental upper mantle: evidence from southern Africa Original Research Article
Pages 45-56
K. Priestley

Imaging the continental upper mantle using electromagnetic methods Original Research Article
Pages 57-80
Alan G. Jones

Heat flow and the structure of Precambrian lithosphere Original Research Article
Pages 81-91
Andrew A. Nyblade

The thermal structure and thickness of continental roots Original Research Article
Pages 93-114
C. Jaupart, J.C. Mareschal

Stability and dynamics of the continental tectosphere Original Research Article
Pages 115-133
Steven S. Shapiro, Bradford H. Hager, Thomas H. Jordan

The continental tectosphere and Earth's long-wavelength gravity field Original Research Article
Pages 135-152
Steven S. Shapiro, Bradford H. Hager, Thomas H. Jordan

The evolution of continental roots in numerical thermo-chemical mantle convection models including differentiation by partial melting Original Research Article
Pages 153-170
J.H. de Smet, A.P. van den Berg, N.J. Vlaar

The age of continental roots Original Research Article
Pages 171-194
D.G. Pearson

Nature of the mantle roots beneath the North American craton: mantle xenolith evidence from Somerset Island kimberlites Original Research Article
Pages 195-216
S.S. Schmidberger, D. Francis

Evidence from mantle xenoliths for relatively thin (<100 km) continental lithosphere below the Phanerozoic crust of southernmost South America Original Research Article
Pages 217-235
Charles R. Stern, Rolf Kilian, Bettina Olker, Eric H. Hauri, T. Kurtis Kyser

Erosion of lithospheric mantle beneath the East African Rift system: geochemical evidence from the Kivu volcanic province Original Research Article
Pages 237-262
Tanya Furman, David Graham

Trace element compositions of minerals in garnet and spinel periodotite xenoliths from the Vitim volcanic field, Transbaikalia, eastern Siberia Original Research Article
Pages 263-285
Sandra M. Glaser, Stephen F. Foley, Detlef GΓΌnther

Growth of subcontinental lithosphere: evidence from repeated dike injections in the balmuccia lherzolite massif, Italian Alps Original Research Article
Pages 287-316
Samuel B. Mukasa, John W. Shervais

Evidence for Archean ocean crust with low high field strength element signature from diamondiferous eclogite xenoliths Original Research Article
Pages 317-336
Dorrit E. Jacob, Stephen F. Foley

Author index to volume 48
Page 337

Subject index
Pages 339-342


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