Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4677241 Earth and Planetary Science Letters 2013 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

Water controls the activity of slip systems in olivine resulting in various types of olivine crystallographic preferred orientation (i.e., fabric) in mantle rocks. The A-type olivine fabric is the most commonly observed olivine fabric in natural peridotites. Development of A-type olivine fabric (developed by the (010)[100] slip system) is known to be limited to the water-poor conditions of the shallow upper mantle (<200 km depth). We have performed simple-shear deformation experiments of olivine at 7.2–11.1 GPa and 1400–1770  K. Here we show that A-type olivine fabric was developed under water-rich conditions (>2130 ppm H/Si in olivine), while B-type fabric (by the (010)[001] slip system) was observed under moderately wet conditions (750–2130 ppm H/Si). Developments of C-type (by the (100)[001] slip system) fabric was limited to water-poor conditions (<220 ppm H/Si). We found that monotonic decrease in the seismic anisotropy VSH/VSV (the ratio of horizontally and vertically polarized shear waves) with depth in the global one-dimensional models is well explained by the olivine fabrics developed in the horizontal flow of a water-poor mantle. Only A-type olivine fabric can explain the vertical mantle flow which associates the seismic anisotropy of VSH/VSV<1 in the deep upper mantle (>200 km depth). A strong anomaly of VSH/VSV<1 observed in the deep upper mantle beneath the East Pacific Rise is well explained by the distribution of water-rich regions (in which A-type olivine fabric is dominantly developed) in the deep upper mantle and upwelling mantle flows.

► Developments of olivine fabrics under Earth's deep upper mantle conditions were investigated. ► Formation of the A-type olivine fabric was observed under water-rich conditions. ► B-type fabrics were formed under moderately wet conditions. ► Origin of the anomaly of VSH/VSV reported beneath the East Pacific Rise is discussed.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth and Planetary Sciences (General)
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