The Role of Lithospheric-Deep Mantle Interactions on the Style and Stress Evolution of Arc-Continent Collision

Authors: Andrés Felipe Rodríguez CorchoSara PolancoRebecca FarringtonRomain BeucherCamilo MontesLouis Moresi

Uploaded by: Andrés Felipe Rodríguez Corcho

Upload date: August 28, 2023

DOIPending

Abstract

Continents grow by the successive accretion of material to their margins, mostly collision and accretion of intra-oceanic magmatic arcs. We investigate the effect of arc buoyancy and viscosity on the mode of collision, and the effects on the margin using a computer modeling approach. Our simulations show that upon collision, it is a small differential in density (3%) between the colliding arc and the continental margin that dictates whether subduction continues or stops after collision. In addition, our models show that arc buoyancy and viscosity drive lithospheric extension in the continental plate. Also, as the subducting slab reaches a mantle discontinuity at 660 km depth, it folds and causes strain and stress fluctuations on the margin.

Publication

DOI10.1029/2022gc010386
Rodríguez Corcho, A. F., Polanco, S., Farrington, R., Beucher, R., Montes, C., & Moresi, L. (2022). The Role of Lithospheric‐Deep Mantle Interactions on the Style and Stress Evolution of Arc‐Continent Collision. Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems, 23(11). DOI: 10.1029/2022gc010386

Tags

CPythonaccretioncollisionmodel input filesmodel output datamodel postprocessing filespublished studysubduction

Graphic abstract

Graphic abstract | The Role of Lithospheric-Deep Mantle Interactions on the Style and Stress Evolution of Arc-Continent Collision

Licence

CC BY 4.0 DEED Attribution 4.0 International

CC BY 4.0: CC BY 4.0 DEED Attribution 4.0 International