Persistent magma-rich waves beneath mid-ocean ridges explain long
periodicity on ocean floor fabric
- Shi Joyce sim
Abstract
The ocean floor makes up the majority of the Earth's surface and yet,
its geomorphology is not fully understood. Recent debate has focused on
whether sea level changes --- driven by Milankovitch glacial cycles ---
generate the abyssal hill fabric of the ocean floor by modulating
mid-ocean ridge magma supply. However, periodicities longer than
Milankovitch cycles are prominent in the ocean bathymetry. Using crustal
thickness estimates from two-phase flow simulations of ridge magma
transport, I show that persistent melt-rich porosity waves are
responsible for the ocean floor fabric at periods of 100 kyrs and
longer, except in the case of fast-spreading ridges. For periods longer
than 100 kyrs, spectral energy is notably present at large mantle
permeabilities regardless of spreading rates. Therefore, two-phase flow
models can provide constraints on elusive mantle parameters such as
permeability and viscosity when directly linked to the ocean floor
fabric produced.