EGU23-6967, updated on 25 Feb 2023
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu23-6967
EGU General Assembly 2023
© Author(s) 2023. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Continental and oceanic upper mantle thermochemical heterogeneity an density in the European – North Atlantic region.

Alexey Shulgin1,3 and Irina Artemieva2
Alexey Shulgin and Irina Artemieva
  • 1University of Oslo (CEED), Center for Earth Evolution and Dynamics (CEED), Oslo, Norway (alexey.shulgin@geo.uio.no)
  • 2GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel, Germany
  • 3Geomap Norge, Norway

We present a joint continental-oceanic upper mantle density model based on 3D tesseroid gravity modeling. On continent lithospheric mantle (LM) density shows no clear difference between the cratonic and Phanerozoic Europe, yet an ~300‐km‐wide zone of a high‐density LM along the Trans‐European Suture Zone may image a paleosubduction. Kimberlite provinces of the Baltica and Greenland cratons have a low‐density (3.32 g/cm3) mantle where all non‐diamondiferous kimberlites tend to a higher‐density (3.34 g/cm3) anomalies. LM density correlates with the depth of sedimentary basins implying that mantle densification plays an important role in basin subsidence. A very dense (3.40–3.45 g/cm3) mantle beneath the superdeep platform basins and the East Barents shelf requires the presence of 10–20% of eclogite, while the West Barents Basin has LM density of 3.35 g/cm3 similar to the Variscan massifs of western Europe. In the North Atlantics, south of the Charlie Gibbs fracture zone (CGFZ) mantle density follows half‐space cooling model with significant deviations at volcanic provinces. North of the CGFZ, the entire North Atlantics is anomalous. Strong low‐density LM anomalies (< −3%) beneath the Azores and north of the CGFZ correlate with geochemical anomalies and indicate the presence of continental fragments and heterogeneous melting sources. Thermal anomalies in the upper mantle averaged down to the transition zone are 100–150 °C at the Azores and can be detected seismically, while a <50 °C anomaly around Iceland is at the limit of seismic resolution. Presented results is a further development of the EUNA-rho model (doi:10.1029/2018JB017025)

How to cite: Shulgin, A. and Artemieva, I.: Continental and oceanic upper mantle thermochemical heterogeneity an density in the European – North Atlantic region., EGU General Assembly 2023, Vienna, Austria, 24–28 Apr 2023, EGU23-6967, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu23-6967, 2023.