Contribution of Mantle Plume, Crustal Thickening, and Greenstone Blanketing to the 2.75-2.65 Ga Global Crisis
Patrice F. Rey*, Pascal Philippot** and Nicolas Thébaud**
*School of Geosciences, Edgeworth Building F05,
The University of Sydney, Sydney NSW 2006, Australia
** IPGP, Laboratoire de Géosciences Marines,
UMR 7097, Tour 26, 4 Place Jussieu, 75252 Paris Cedex 05, France.
in: Precambrian Research (2003), Vol.127, 2, pp. 43-60.
ABSTRACT
Assuming that the period 2.75-2.65 Ga corresponds to a single, but global geodynamic event, we investigate through numerical experiments the mechanisms that could have led to the profound continental reworking that occurred at that time. Although the extent of the crisis at the Earths surface pledges in favour of the involvement of mantle plumes, our numerical experiments suggest that the thermal impact of mantle plumes is unlikely to explain both the amplitude and timing of the thermal anomaly, as observed in the Superior Province (Canada) and the Yilgarn Craton (Australia). Similarly, moderate crustal thickening can not lead to significant reworking of the continental crust within the observed time constraint. Crustal thickening with a factor &Mac179; 1.5 is also unlikely because it is not consistent with the moderate metamorphic grade observed at the surface of many Archaean cratons. Burial of a radiogenic crust under a 10 km thick greenstone cover also falls short of explaining, not so much the amplitude and the extent, but the timing of the thermal anomaly. In contrast, the combination of the thermal anomaly related to the greenstone blanketing effect with the heat transfer from a plume head spreading at the top of the thermal boundary layer can adequately explain the amplitude, the timing and the extent of the 2.75-2.65 Ga crisis.
Our favoured model involves a global re-arrangement of convection cells in the deep mantle and formation of multiple mantle plumes. The greenstones emplaced at the surface and the plumes that spread in the thermal boundary layer contributed to heat the crust from both above and below. This produced massive crustal partial-melting that reached its climax ca. 40 Myr after the emplacement of the plumes and associated greenstone cover rocks. This led to gravitational instabilities in the crust, as dense greenstone cover rocks began to sink into the thermally softened crust and, granite domes rose in response. The extraction of heat-producing elements toward the upper part of the crust has contributed to the cooling and stabilization of the cratons. This succession of events, which is not incompatible with plate-tectonic processes, may have profoundly changed the nature of the crust exposed at the surface and could explain the contrasting geochemical signatures of Archaean and post-Archaean shales.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This paper has benefited from countless discussions with G. Houseman, S. Costa, J. Ludden, W. J. Collins, and many other colleagues while the first author was visiting the Institut de Physique du Globe in Paris. Many thanks are due also to M. Van Kranendonk, R. Kerrich, M. Sandiford, and D. Wyman for their time and effort in helping us to improve the paper. This work was supported by ARC Large Grant Nº: A10017138, and ARC DP Nº0342933.
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