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Dynamic component of the asthenosphere: lateral viscosity variations due to dislocation creep at the base of oceanic plates
  • Vojtech Patocka,
  • Hana Cizkova,
  • Jakub Pokorny
Vojtech Patocka
Charles University

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Hana Cizkova
Charles University, Faculty of Mathematics and Physics
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Jakub Pokorny
Charles University
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Abstract

The asthenosphere is commonly defined as an upper mantle zone with low velocities and high attenuation of seismic waves, and high electrical conductivity. These observations are usually explained by the presence of partial melt, or by a sharp contrasts in the water content of the upper mantle. Low viscosity asthenosphere is an essential ingredient of functioning plate tectonics. We argue that a substantial component of asthenospheric weakening is dynamic, caused by dislocation creep at the base of tectonic plates. Numerical simulations of subduction show that dynamic weakening scales with the surface velocity both below the subducting and the overriding plate, and that the viscosity decrease reaches up to two orders of magnitude. The resulting scaling law is employed in an apriori estimate of the lateral viscosity variations (LVV) below Earth’s oceans. The obtained LVV helps in explaining some of the long-standing as well as recent problems in mantle viscosity inversions.
17 Jan 2024Submitted to ESS Open Archive
02 Feb 2024Published in ESS Open Archive