Abstract

Intense devolatilization and chemical-density differentiation attended late-stage accretion of the primitive Earth; it lessened after crystallization of a magma mush ocean during continued cooling. By ∼ 4.3Ga, shallow seas were present, so surface temperatures had fallen far below the ∼ 1300, ∼ 1120, and ∼ 950°C low-pressure solidi of peridotite, basalt, and granite, respectively. At temperatures less than about half their solidi, such materials existed as lithosphere in the near-surface Hadean realm. Stagnant-lid convection probably did not occur because massive heat transfer necessitated vigorous crust–mantle overturn in the early, hot Earth. Instead, bottom-up mantle convection, including voluminous plume ascent, efficiently rid the planet of heat, but lessened over time. Plate thickening and broadening is reflected in the post-Hadean rock record. Stages of geologic evolution included: (a) 4.5–4.4Ga, early, chaotic magma mush ocean overturn and ephemeral lithospheric platelets; (b) 4.4–2.7Ga, growth of oceanic and diminutive continental plates, obliterated by return mantle flow prior to ∼ 4.0Ga, but the latter enlarging and gradually accumulating as largely submarine, sutured, sialic crust-capped lithospheric collages; (c) 2.7–1.0Ga, progressive assembly of old shields and younger orogenic belts into supercratonal plates characterized by continental freeboard, sedimentary differentiation, and episodic glaciation during transpolar drift, as well as onset of regionally, temporally limited stagnant-lid convection beneath supercontinents; (d) 1.0Ga-present, modern, laminar-flowing asthenospheric cells capped by giant, stately moving plates. Restriction of komatiitic lavas to the Archean, and of multicycle sediments, most ophiolite complexes ± alkaline igneous rocks, and high-pressure and ultrahigh-pressure metamorphic belts to progressively younger Proterozoic–Phanerozoic orogens reflects increasingly negative buoyancy of the cooler oceanic lithosphere. Attending supercontinent assembly, density instabilities of thickening oceanic plates increasingly began to dominate overturn of the suboceanic mantle as cold, top-down convection. Scales and dynamics of hot asthenospheric upwelling versus lithospheric foundering and asthenospheric return flow (bottom-up versus top-down) changed gradually over geologic time in response to planetary thermal relaxation.

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