Heat flow, heat production, thermal structure and its tectonic implication of the southern Tan-Lu Fault Zone, East–Central China

Geothermics ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 82 ◽  
pp. 254-266 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yibo Wang ◽  
Shengbiao Hu ◽  
Zhuting Wang ◽  
Guangzheng Jiang ◽  
Di Hu ◽  
...  
Data in Brief ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 26 ◽  
pp. 104459
Author(s):  
Yibo Wang ◽  
Shengbiao Hu ◽  
Zhuting Wang ◽  
Guangzheng Jiang ◽  
Di Hu ◽  
...  

1987 ◽  
Vol 144 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-42 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. K. LEE ◽  
G. C. BROWN ◽  
P. C. WEBB ◽  
J. WHEILDON ◽  
K. E. ROLLIN

2019 ◽  
Vol 219 (3) ◽  
pp. 1648-1659 ◽  
Author(s):  
B Mather ◽  
L Moresi ◽  
P Rayner

SUMMARY The variation of temperature in the crust is difficult to quantify due to the sparsity of surface heat flow observations and lack of measurements on the thermal properties of rocks at depth. We examine the degree to which the thermal structure of the crust can be constrained from the Curie depth and surface heat flow data in Southeastern Australia. We cast the inverse problem of heat conduction within a Bayesian framework and derive its adjoint so that we can efficiently find the optimal model that best reproduces the data and prior information on the thermal properties of the crust. Efficiency gains obtained from the adjoint method facilitate a detailed exploration of thermal structure in SE Australia, where we predict high temperatures within Precambrian rocks of 650 °C due to relatively high rates of heat production (0.9–1.4 μW m−3). In contrast, temperatures within dominantly Phanerozoic crust reach only 520 °C at the Moho due to the low rates of heat production in Cambrian mafic volcanics. A combination of the Curie depth and heat flow data is required to constrain the uncertainty of lower crustal temperatures to ±73 °C. We also show that parts of the crust are unconstrained if either data set is omitted from the inversion.


1987 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 275-278 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. L. Vigneresse ◽  
J. Jolivet ◽  
M. Cuney ◽  
G. Bienfait
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andres Tassara ◽  
Joaquín Julve ◽  
Iñigo Echeverría ◽  
Ingo Stotz

<p>The distribution of temperature inside active continental margins plays a fundamental role on regulating first order geodynamic processes as the isostatic balance, rheologic behavior of crust and mantle, magmagenesis, volcanism and seismogenesis. In spite of these major implications, well-constrained 3D thermal models are known for few regions of the world (Europe, Western USA, China) where large geophysical databases have been integrated into compositional and structural models of crust and lithospheric mantle from which a thermal model is derived. Here we present a three-dimensional representation of the distribution of temperature underneath the Andean active margin of South America (10°-45°S) that is based on a geophysically-constrained model for the geometry of the subducted slab, continental lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary (LAB), Moho discontinuity and an intracrustal discontinuity (ICD). This input model was constructed by forward modelling the satellite gravity anomaly under the constraint of most of the seismic information published for this region. We use analytical expressions of 1D conductive continental geotherms with adequate boundary conditions that consider the compositional stratification of crust and mantle included in the input model, and the advective thermal effect of slab subduction. The 1D geotherms are assembled into a 3D volume defining the thermal structure of the study region. We test the influence of several thermal parameters and structural configurations of the Andean lithosphere by comparing the resulting surface heat flow distribution of these different models against a database containing heat flow measurements that we compile from the literature. Our results show that the thermal structure and derived surface heat flow is dominantly controlled by the geometry of the thermal boundary layer at the base of the lithosphere, i.e. the slab upper surface below the forearc and LAB inland. Variations on the modeled configuration of the continental lithosphere (i.e. the way on which the geometry of the continental Moho and ICD are considered into the definition of a space-variable thermal conductivity or the length scale for radiogenic heat production) have an effect on surface heat flow that is lower than the average uncertainty of the measurements and therefore can be considered as second-order. The simplicity of our analytical approach allows us to compute hundreds of different models in order to test the sensitivity of results to changes on thermal parameters (conductivity, heat production, mantle potential temperature, etc), which provides a tool for discussing their possible range of values in the context of a subduction margin. We will also show how variations of these models impact on the Moho temperature and therefore in the expected mechanical behavior of crust and mantle in this geotectonic context</p>


2000 ◽  
Vol 37 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 399-414 ◽  
Author(s):  
J C Mareschal ◽  
C Jaupart ◽  
C Gariépy ◽  
L Z Cheng ◽  
L Guillou-Frottier ◽  
...  

Five new heat-flow and heat-production measurements in the Archean Superior Province are presented. These measurements include the first heat-flow values to be reported for the Opatica subprovince and the Otish basin. These new data complete the data set acquired in the eastern Canadian Shield during the Abitibi-Grenville Lithoprobe transect. The data set now available in eastern Canada, covering geological provinces ranging in age from 2700 to 400 Ma, achieves sufficient sampling to define the deep thermal structure of a continent near the edge of the craton. It shows that, for the Canadian Shield, there is no simple relation between heat flow and the age of tectonic provinces. The map of heat flow in eastern Canada demonstrates that there is no significant difference in heat flow between the Abitibi subprovince and the Grenville Province (including the Adirondacks) where the area-weighted average heat flow is the same (39 vs. 38 mW·m-2, respectively). Outside the Abitibi, the Superior Province is characterized by a higher heat flow (45 mW·m-2). Heat-flow and gravity data are used together to determine changes in crustal composition and thickness. The analysis of these data and constraints from seismology support the view that the variations in surface heat flow can be entirely accounted for by changes in crustal composition. Heat-flow variations across the Abitibi subprovince indicate that there are significant differences in crustal composition that reflect the complex assemblages that make up the Archean crust. The heat-flow map shows a sharp transition between the Grenville Province and the Appalachians, where the average heat flow is significantly higher (57 mW·m-2). This difference is due to higher heat production in the Appalachian upper crust with the same mantle heat flow as in the shield (~12 mW·m-2 throughout eastern Canada). Lower crustal and upper mantle temperatures are typically low, which might explain the preservation of irregular crustal thickness over several billion years.


1987 ◽  
Vol 24 (8) ◽  
pp. 1583-1594 ◽  
Author(s):  
David M. Fountain ◽  
Matthew H. Salisbury ◽  
Kevin P. Furlong

The Pikwitonei and Sachigo subprovinces of central Manitoba provide a cross-sectional view of the Superior Province crust. In cross section, the upper to mid-level crust is composed of synformal greenstone belts surrounded by tonalitic gneisses, both of which are intruded by granitoid plutons. This crustal structure persists downward into the granulite facies, where keels of the greenstone belts can be found. To constrain thermal models of the crust, we measured heat production and thermal conductivity in 60 rocks from this terrain using standard gamma-ray spectrometry and divided bar techniques. Large vertical and lateral heterogeneities in heat production in the upper crust are evident; heat production is high in granites and metasedimentary rocks, intermediate in tonalite gneisses, and low in the portions of greenstone belts dominated by mafic meta-igneous rocks. In the deeper granulite facies rocks, heat production decreases by a factor of two in the tonalitic gneisses and remains low in the high-grade mafic rocks. When applied to the Pikwitonei–Sachigo crust cross section, the laboratory data here do not support step function or exponential models of the variation of heat production with depth. However, estimates of surface heat flow and surface heat production for various sites in the crustal model yield the well-known linear relationship between surface heat production and surface heat flow observed for heat-flow provinces for both one- and two-dimensional models. This demonstrates that determinations of heat production with depth based on inversion of the linear heat-production–heat-flow relationship are nonunique.


2003 ◽  
Vol 140 (6) ◽  
pp. 707-719 ◽  
Author(s):  
QIU NANSHENG

The thermal properties of rocks in the upper crust of the Qaidam basin are given based on measurements of 98 thermal conductivities and 50 heat production values. Nineteen new measured heat flow data were obtained from thermal conductivity data and systematic steady-state temperature data. This paper contributes 28 calculated heat flow values for the basin for the first time. Examination of 47 heat flow values, ranging from 31.3 to 70.4 mW/m2 with an average value of 52.6±9.6 mW/m2, gives the heat flow distribution character of the basin: high heat flows over 60 mW/m2 are distributed in the western and central parts of the basin. Lower heat flow values are found in the eastern part and north marginal area of the basin, with values less 40 mW/m2. The Qaidam basin heatflow data show a linear relationship between heatflow and heat production, based on thermal structure analysis. The thermal structure of the lithosphere is characterized as having a ‘hot crust’ but ‘cold mantle’. Heat production in the upper crust is a significant source of heat in the basin and contributes up to 56.8% of the surface heat flow. The heat flow province is of great geophysical significance, and the thermal structure of the area gives clues about the regional geodynamics. Study of the Qaidam basin thermal structure shows that the crust has been highly active, particularly during its most recent geological evolution. This corresponds to Himalayan tectonic movements during latest Eocene to Quaternary times in the region of the Qinghai–Tibet Plateau. Since the Qaidam basin is in the northeastern area of the Qinghai–Tibet Plateau, the heat flow values and the thermal structure of the basin may give some insight into the thermal state of the plateau, and study of thermal regime of the Qaidam basin could in turn provide useful information about the tectonics of the Qinghai–Tibet Plateau.


1987 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 283-286 ◽  
Author(s):  
David M. Fountain ◽  
Kevin P. Furlong ◽  
Matthew H. Salisbury

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document