scholarly journals The upper mantle geoid: Implications for continental structure and the intraplate stress field

Author(s):  
David Coblentz ◽  
Jolante van Wijk ◽  
Randall M. Richardson ◽  
Mike Sandiford
1995 ◽  
Vol 133 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 299-309 ◽  
Author(s):  
David D. Coblentz ◽  
Mike Sandiford ◽  
Randall M. Richardson ◽  
Shaohua Zhou ◽  
Richard Hillis

1995 ◽  
Vol 100 (B10) ◽  
pp. 20245-20255 ◽  
Author(s):  
David D. Coblentz ◽  
Randall M. Richardson

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anthony Osei Tutu ◽  
Bernhard Steinberger ◽  
Stephan V. Sobolev ◽  
Irina Rogozhina ◽  
Anton A. Popov

Abstract. The orientation and tectonic regime of the observed crustal/lithospheric stress field contribute to our knowledge of different deformation processes occurring within the Earth's crust and lithosphere. In this study, we analyze the influence of the thermal and density structure of the upper mantle on the lithospheric stress field and topography. We use a 3D lithosphere-asthenosphere numerical model with power-law rheology, coupled to a spectral mantle flow code at 300 km depth. Our results are validated against the World Stress Map 2016 and the observation-based residual topography. We derive the upper mantle thermal structure from either a heat flow model combined with a sea floor age model (TM1) or a global S-wave velocity model (TM2). We show that lateral density heterogeneities in the upper 300 km have a limited influence on the modeled horizontal stress field as opposed to the resulting dynamic topography that appears more sensitive to such heterogeneities. There is hardly any difference between the stress orientation patterns predicted with and without consideration of the heterogeneities in the upper mantle density structure across North America, Australia, and North Africa. In contrast, we find that the dynamic topography is to a greater extent controlled by the upper mantle density structure. After correction for the chemical depletion of continents, the TM2 model leads to a much better fit with the observed residual topography giving a correlation of 0.51 in continents, but this correction leads to no significant improvement in the resulting lithosphere stresses. In continental regions with abundant heat flow data such as, for instant, Western Europe, TM1 results in relatively a small angular misfits of 18.30° between the modeled and observation-based stress field compared 19.90° resulting from modeled lithosphere stress with s-wave based model TM2.


The World Stress Map Project is a global cooperative effort to compile and interpret data on the orientation and relative magnitudes of the contemporary in situ tectonic stress field in the Earth's lithosphere. Horizontal stress orientations show regionally uniform patterns throughout many continental intraplate regions. These regional intraplate stress fields are consistent over regions 1000-5000 km wide or ca . 100 times the thickness of the upper brittle part of the lithosphere ( ca . 20 km) and about 10-15 times the thickness of typical continental lithosphere ( ca . 150-200 km). Relative stress magnitudes or stress regimes in the lithosphere are inferred from direct in situ stress measurements and from the style of active faulting. The intraplate stress field in both the oceans and continents is largely compressional with one or both of the horizontal stresses greater than the vertical stress. The regionally uniform horizontal intraplate stress orientations are generally consistent with either relative or absolute plate motions indicating that plate-boundary forces dominate the stress distribution within the plates. Since most regions of normal faulting occur in areas of high elevation, the extensional stress régimes in these areas can be attributed to superimposed bouyancy forces related to crustal thickening and/or lithosphere thinning; stresses derived from these bouyancy forces locally exceed mid-plate compressional stresses. Evaluating the effect of viscous drag forces acting on the plates is difficult. Simple driving or resisting drag models (with shear tractions acting parallel or antiparallel to plate motion) are consistent with stress orientation data; however, the large lateral stress gradients across broad plates required to balance these tractions are not observed in the relative stress magnitude data. Current models of stresses due to whole mantle flow inferred from seismic tomography models (and with the inclusion of the effect of high density slabs) predict a general compressional stress state within continents but do not match the broad-scale horizontal stress orientations. The broad regionally uniform intraplate stress orientations are best correlated with compressional plate-boundary forces and the geometry of the plate boundaries.


2016 ◽  
Vol 71 ◽  
pp. 278-295 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcelo Assumpção ◽  
Fábio L. Dias ◽  
Ivan Zevallos ◽  
John B. Naliboff

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