Evidence indicating that the mantle below Pangea was characterized by elevated temperatures supports the widely held view that a supercontinent insulates the underlying mantle. Implementing a 3D model of mantle convection featuring distinct oceanic and continental plates, we explore different effects of supercontinent formation on mantle evolution. We find that a halt in subduction along the margins of the site of the continental collision is sufficient to enable the formation of mantle plumes below a composite "super-plate" and that the addition of continental properties that contribute to insulation have little effect on sub-continental temperature. Our findings show that the mean temperature below a supercontinent surpasses that below the oceanic plates when the former is a perfect insulator but that continental thermal insulation plays only a minor role in the growth of sub-supercontinent mantle plumes. We suggest that the growth of a super-oceanic plate can equally encourage the appearance of underlying upwellings. © 2010 by the American Geophysical Union.
CITATION STYLE
Heron, P. J., & Lowman, J. P. (2010, November 1). Thermal response of the mantle following the formation of a super-plate. Geophysical Research Letters. Blackwell Publishing Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1029/2010GL045136
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