Plume-induced mantle flow and thermal dispersion along mid-ocean ridges:
Insights from geodynamic modeling of plume-ridge interactions
Abstract
A key aspect in interaction between upwelling mantle plumes and
spreading mid-ocean ridges is the along-axis dispersion of the plume,
reflecting how far the plume flows along the spreading ridge axis.
Observational studies measure the dispersion distance based on the width
of geophysical or geochemical anomalies, while theoretical models often
define it as the distance reached by plume flow through material
advection or thermal diffusion. However, variability in these
measurements and the underlying causes remain unresolved. To fill this
gap, we explore the dynamics of plume-ridge interactions using
three-dimensional non-Newtonian geodynamic models that simulate both
material and thermal flow. Unlike previous studies that suggest a steady
and uniform ascent, our results show a two-stage plume upwelling
process: an initially accelerated ascent from the deep mantle to the
mantle dehydration zone, followed by deceleration with lateral
dispersion across and along the ridge axis. During the dispersion stage,
plume flux and plume-ridge separation distance significantly influence
both along-axis dispersion distance and thermal topography of the plume,
while ridge spreading rate primarily affects the former. Observations
and models consistently show that plume thermal diffusion extends
farther along the ridge axis than material advection, with the thermal
dispersion distance being approximately 1.55 times greater. We further
propose two practical geodynamic indicators—a 0.7 plume material
isoconcentration and an isotherm at 0.1 times the excess plume
temperature—that can serve as references for estimating plume
properties during along-axis dispersion in future studies of more
complex plume-ridge systems.