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Deep continental roots and cratons

Authors :
Lawrence Hongliang Wang
James M. Scott
Peter B. Kelemen
Jeroen van Hunen
Kristoffer Szilas
Thomas Chacko
D. Graham Pearson
Jingao Liu
Andrew J. Schaeffer
Source :
Pearson, D G, Scott, J M, Liu, J, Schaeffer, A, Wang, L H, Hunen, J V, Szilas, K, Chacko, T & Kelemen, P B 2021, ' Deep continental roots and cratons ', Nature, vol. 596, pp. 199-210 . https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-03600-5, Nature, 2021, Vol.596(7871), pp.199-210 [Peer Reviewed Journal]
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The formation and preservation of cratons—the oldest parts of the continents, comprising over 60 per cent of the continental landmass—remains an enduring problem. Key to craton development is how and when the thick strong mantle roots that underlie these regions formed and evolved. Peridotite melting residues forming cratonic lithospheric roots mostly originated via relatively low-pressure melting and were subsequently transported to greater depth by thickening produced by lateral accretion and compression. The longest-lived cratons were assembled during Mesoarchean and Palaeoproterozoic times, creating the stable mantle roots 150 to 250 kilometres thick that are critical to preserving Earth’s early continents and central to defining the cratons, although we extend the definition of cratons to include extensive regions of long-stable Mesoproterozoic crust also underpinned by thick lithospheric roots. The production of widespread thick and strong lithosphere via the process of orogenic thickening, possibly in several cycles, was fundamental to the eventual emergence of extensive continental landmasses—the cratons. Cratons are the oldest parts of the Earth’s continents; this Review concludes that the production of widespread, thick and strong lithosphere via the process of orogenic thickening was fundamental to the eventual emergence of extensive continental landmasses.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pearson, D G, Scott, J M, Liu, J, Schaeffer, A, Wang, L H, Hunen, J V, Szilas, K, Chacko, T & Kelemen, P B 2021, ' Deep continental roots and cratons ', Nature, vol. 596, pp. 199-210 . https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-03600-5, Nature, 2021, Vol.596(7871), pp.199-210 [Peer Reviewed Journal]
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....556e0eb8c404506457b2062ff0bb2851
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-03600-5