- 1Bergen University, Earth Sciences, Bergen, Norway (ritske.huismans@geo.uib.no)
- 2GFZ Helmholtz Centre for Geosciences, Potsdam, Germany
- 3Department of Science, University Roma Tre, Roma, Italy
The origin of hot ocean-continent back-arc regions with very thin mantle lithosphere and very high surface heat flow in both extensional and contractional ocean-continent subduction systems is highly enigmatic and unresolved. These first order characteristics have often been explained with either convective mantle lithosphere removal or by back-arc extension. However, it is unclear what may cause the proposed convective thinning and/or delamination of eclogitic lower crust over very wide regions, whereas back-arc extension is either not observed or insufficient to explain the observed very thin mantle lithosphere. Notably, many of these ocean-continent systems have a long history of terrane accretion. Here we show, using thermo-mechanical model experiments, that terrane accretion provides a consistent explanation for the observed key characteristics and naturally leads to rheologically weak back-arcs with continental crust directly on top of hot sub-lithospheric mantle.
Associated article:
Erdős, Z., Huismans, R.S., Wolf. S., Facenna, C. (2025), Terrane accretion explains thin and hot ocean-continent back-arcs. Science Advances 11, eadq8444. https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.adq8444
How to cite: Huismans, R. S., Erdős, Z., Wolf, S. G., and Faccenna, C.: Terrane accretion explains thin and hot ocean-continent back-arcs, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9138, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9138, 2026.