Feedback between mountain belt growth and plate convergence

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Feedback between mountain belt growth and plate convergence. / Iaffaldano, Giampiero; Bunge, Hans-Peter; Dixon, Timothy H.

In: Geology, Vol. 34, No. 10, 10.2006, p. 893-896.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Iaffaldano, G, Bunge, H-P & Dixon, TH 2006, 'Feedback between mountain belt growth and plate convergence', Geology, vol. 34, no. 10, pp. 893-896. https://doi.org/10.1130/G22661.1

APA

Iaffaldano, G., Bunge, H-P., & Dixon, T. H. (2006). Feedback between mountain belt growth and plate convergence. Geology, 34(10), 893-896. https://doi.org/10.1130/G22661.1

Vancouver

Iaffaldano G, Bunge H-P, Dixon TH. Feedback between mountain belt growth and plate convergence. Geology. 2006 Oct;34(10):893-896. https://doi.org/10.1130/G22661.1

Author

Iaffaldano, Giampiero ; Bunge, Hans-Peter ; Dixon, Timothy H. / Feedback between mountain belt growth and plate convergence. In: Geology. 2006 ; Vol. 34, No. 10. pp. 893-896.

Bibtex

@article{c9e6feb371bc4030a19be80b440b96c6,
title = "Feedback between mountain belt growth and plate convergence",
abstract = "While it is generally assumed that global plate motions are driven by the pattern of convection in the Earth's mantle, the details of that link remain obscure. Bouyancy forces associated with subduction of cool, dense lithosphere at zones of plate convergence are thought to provide significant driving force, but the relative magnitudes of other driving and resisting forces are less clear, as are the main factors controlling long-term changes in plate motion. The ability to consider past as well as present plate motions provides significant additional constraints, because changes in plate motion are necessarily driven by changes in one or more driving or resisting forces, which may be inferred from independent data. Here we present for the first time a model that explicitly links global mantle convection and lithosphere models to infer plate motion changes as far back as Miocene time. By accurately predicting observed convergence rates over the past 10 m.y., we demonstrate that surface topography generated at convergent margins is a key factor controlling the long-term evolution of plate motion. Specifically, the topographic load of large mountain belts and plateaus consumes a significant amount of the driving force available for plate tectonics by increasing frictional forces between downgoing and overriding plates. ",
keywords = "plate convergence, mountain building, resistive stresses, plate motion",
author = "Giampiero Iaffaldano and Hans-Peter Bunge and Dixon, {Timothy H.}",
year = "2006",
month = oct,
doi = "10.1130/G22661.1",
language = "English",
volume = "34",
pages = "893--896",
journal = "Geology",
issn = "0091-7613",
publisher = "GeoScienceWorld",
number = "10",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Feedback between mountain belt growth and plate convergence

AU - Iaffaldano, Giampiero

AU - Bunge, Hans-Peter

AU - Dixon, Timothy H.

PY - 2006/10

Y1 - 2006/10

N2 - While it is generally assumed that global plate motions are driven by the pattern of convection in the Earth's mantle, the details of that link remain obscure. Bouyancy forces associated with subduction of cool, dense lithosphere at zones of plate convergence are thought to provide significant driving force, but the relative magnitudes of other driving and resisting forces are less clear, as are the main factors controlling long-term changes in plate motion. The ability to consider past as well as present plate motions provides significant additional constraints, because changes in plate motion are necessarily driven by changes in one or more driving or resisting forces, which may be inferred from independent data. Here we present for the first time a model that explicitly links global mantle convection and lithosphere models to infer plate motion changes as far back as Miocene time. By accurately predicting observed convergence rates over the past 10 m.y., we demonstrate that surface topography generated at convergent margins is a key factor controlling the long-term evolution of plate motion. Specifically, the topographic load of large mountain belts and plateaus consumes a significant amount of the driving force available for plate tectonics by increasing frictional forces between downgoing and overriding plates.

AB - While it is generally assumed that global plate motions are driven by the pattern of convection in the Earth's mantle, the details of that link remain obscure. Bouyancy forces associated with subduction of cool, dense lithosphere at zones of plate convergence are thought to provide significant driving force, but the relative magnitudes of other driving and resisting forces are less clear, as are the main factors controlling long-term changes in plate motion. The ability to consider past as well as present plate motions provides significant additional constraints, because changes in plate motion are necessarily driven by changes in one or more driving or resisting forces, which may be inferred from independent data. Here we present for the first time a model that explicitly links global mantle convection and lithosphere models to infer plate motion changes as far back as Miocene time. By accurately predicting observed convergence rates over the past 10 m.y., we demonstrate that surface topography generated at convergent margins is a key factor controlling the long-term evolution of plate motion. Specifically, the topographic load of large mountain belts and plateaus consumes a significant amount of the driving force available for plate tectonics by increasing frictional forces between downgoing and overriding plates.

KW - plate convergence

KW - mountain building

KW - resistive stresses

KW - plate motion

U2 - 10.1130/G22661.1

DO - 10.1130/G22661.1

M3 - Journal article

VL - 34

SP - 893

EP - 896

JO - Geology

JF - Geology

SN - 0091-7613

IS - 10

ER -

ID: 138730348