Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems (Nov 2021)
On the Evolution and Fate of Sediment Diapirs in Subduction Zones
Abstract
Abstract At subduction zones, significant volumes of sediments and other crustal material are carried on top of the downgoing plate past the trench and into the mantle. This represents the dominant process by which material from the Earth's surface is recycled to the interior. However, the fate of these recycled materials is uncertain. Subducted material may be carried with the slab into the deep mantle, or it may form diapirs that ascend into the hotter portions of the mantle wedge, where they can melt and/or be relaminated to the base of the arc crust. While this material can be a mixture (or “mélange”) of sediments, oceanic crust and mantle rocks, here we focus on the dynamics of the uppermost layer of sediments on the downgoing slab. We modified a thermodynamic model to accurately predict the equilibrium mineral assemblage, melting behavior, and density of a range of subducted sediment compositions at pressure and temperature conditions relevant to subduction zones. Using this thermodynamic model, we constructed a coupled dynamic model of sediment diapirs and identified the primary parameters that control diapir behavior: sediment thickness and composition, and the thermal state of the subduction zone. Relamination of ascending diapirs is favored by greater sediment thicknesses, more felsic compositions, and warmer thermal conditions. By contrast, diapirism is suppressed in colder arcs, or where subducted sediment layers are thin or more mafic. Applying this model to modern subduction zones suggests that multiple processes are active today, with relamination occurring in a significant subset of modern arcs.
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