CONSTRAINTS ON THE COUPLED THERMAL EVOLUTION OF THE EARTH'S CORE AND MANTLE, THE AGE OF THE INNER CORE, AND THE ORIGIN OF THE 186OS/188OS "CORE SIGNAL" IN PLUME-DERIVED LAVAS

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dc.contributor.author Lassiter J.C.
dc.date.accessioned 2024-10-14T08:52:08Z
dc.date.available 2024-10-14T08:52:08Z
dc.date.issued 2006
dc.identifier https://www.elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=14698165
dc.identifier.citation Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 2006, 250, 1-2, 306-317
dc.identifier.issn 0012-821X
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/45856
dc.description.abstract The possibility that some mantle plumes may carry a geochemical signature of core/mantle interaction has rightly generated considerable interest and attention in recent years. Correlated 186Os-187Os enrichments in some plume-derived lavas (Hawaii, Gorgona, Kostomuksha) have been interpreted as deriving from an outer core with elevated Pt/Os and Re/Os ratios due to the solidification of the Earth's inner core (c.f., [A.D. Brandon, R.J. Walker, The debate over core-mantle interaction, Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 232 (2005) 211-225.] and references therein). Conclusive identification of a "core signal" in plume-derived lavas would profoundly influence our understanding of mantle convection and evolution. This paper reevaluates the Os-isotope evidence for core/mantle interaction by examining other geochemical constraints on core/mantle interaction, geophysical constraints on the thermal evolution of the outer core, and geochemical and cosmochemical constraints on the abundance of heat-producing elements in the core. Additional study of metal/silicate and sulfide/silicate partitioning of K, Pb, and other trace elements is needed to more tightly constrain the likely starting composition of the Earth's core. However, available data suggest that the observed 186Os enrichments in Hawaiian and other plume-derived lavas are unlikely to derive from core/mantle interaction. 1) Core/mantle interaction sufficient to produce the observed 186Os enrichments would likely have significant effects on other tracers such as Pb- and W-isotopes that are not observed. 2) Significant partitioning of K or other heat-producing elements into the core would produce a "core depletion" pattern in the Silicate Earth very different from that observed. 3) In the absence of heat-producing elements in the core, core/mantle heat flow of ~ 6-15 TW estimated from several independent geophysical constraints suggests an inner core age (< ~ 2.5 Ga) too young for the outer core to have developed a significant 186Os enrichment. Core/mantle thermal and chemical interaction remains an important problem that warrants future research. However, Os-isotopes may have only limited utility in this area due to the relatively young age of the Earth's inner core. © 2006.
dc.subject CORE/MANTLE BOUNDARY
dc.subject INNER CORE
dc.subject OSMIUM
dc.subject POTASSIUM
dc.subject THERMAL EVOLUTION
dc.title CONSTRAINTS ON THE COUPLED THERMAL EVOLUTION OF THE EARTH'S CORE AND MANTLE, THE AGE OF THE INNER CORE, AND THE ORIGIN OF THE 186OS/188OS "CORE SIGNAL" IN PLUME-DERIVED LAVAS
dc.type Статья
dc.identifier.doi 10.1016/j.epsl.2006.07.044


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