Abstract

Floating rather stably above the convective mantle, continents exert a thermal blanket effect on the mantle by locally accumulating heat and altering the flow structure, which in turn affect continent motion. This thermal-mechanic feedback has been captured by a simplified model―a thermally insulating plate floating freely over a bottom-heated convecting fluid. Previous studies have revealed that, as plate size increases, plate motion transitions from long-term stagnancy over cold downwelling to short-term stagnancy over hot upwelling, termed stagnant modes (SMs) I and II, respectively, and eventually to a unidirectionally moving mode (UMM) with no stagnancy. During SM I/II, the adjacent hot/cold plumes are observed to move toward/away from the plate. The present study quantifies these plume motions through analysis on a partially insulated loop model established for SM I and SM II, respectively. The model predictions are well verified by results of numerical simulation. Moreover, the dominant frequency of plate speed is shown to increase linearly with plate size, with an abrupt jump as the coupling mode transitions from SM I to SM II. This suggests that the enhanced thermal blanket effect with plate size enables an increasingly fast feedback between the slowdown of a plate and the strengthening of hot upwelling which boosts plate motion. When plate motion is boosted before it stops, the UMM emerges. The predicted critical plate size for the UMM is well validated by simulation results. Geological implications of the results for continent motion, continent–mantle coupling and particularly the migration of plume and subduction sites are discussed.

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