Abstract

AbstractAsthenospheric shear causes some minerals, particularly olivine, to develop anisotropic textures that can be detected seismically. In laboratory experiments, these textures are also associated with anisotropic viscous behavior, which should be important for geodynamic processes. To examine the role of anisotropic viscosity for asthenospheric deformation, we developed a numerical model of coupled anisotropic texture development and anisotropic viscosity, both calibrated with laboratory measurements of olivine aggregates. This model characterizes the time‐dependent coupling between large‐scale formation of lattice‐preferred orientation (i.e., texture) and changes in asthenospheric viscosity for a series of simple deformation paths that represent upper mantle geodynamic processes. We find that texture development beneath a moving surface plate tends to align the a axes of olivine into the plate motion direction, which weakens the effective viscosity in this direction and increases plate velocity for a given driving force. Our models indicate that the effective viscosity increases for shear in the horizontal direction perpendicular to the a axes. This increase should slow plate motions and new texture development in this perpendicular direction and could impede changes to the plate motion direction for tens of millions of years. However, the same well‐developed asthenospheric texture may foster subduction initiation perpendicular to the plate motion and deformations related to transform faults, as shearing on vertical planes seems to be favored across a sublithospheric olivine texture. These end‐member cases examining shear deformation in the presence of a well‐formed asthenospheric texture illustrate the importance of the mean olivine orientation, and its associated viscous anisotropy, for a variety of geodynamic processes.

Highlights

  • The physical characteristics of the upper mantle, for example, its density and rheology, control a variety of surface features, such as general tectonic regime, faulting characteristics, dynamic topography, and plate velocity

  • To examine the role of anisotropic viscosity for asthenospheric deformation, we developed a numerical model of coupled anisotropic texture development and anisotropic viscosity, both calibrated with laboratory measurements of olivine aggregates

  • We find that texture development beneath a moving surface plate tends to align the a axes of olivine into the plate motion direction, which weakens the effective viscosity in this direction and increases plate velocity for a given driving force

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Summary

Introduction

The physical characteristics of the upper mantle, for example, its density and rheology, control a variety of surface features, such as general tectonic regime, faulting characteristics, dynamic topography, and plate velocity. Many of these features are related to the properties of olivine, which comprises ~60% of the upper mantle (Stixrude & Lithgow‐Bertelloni, 2005). The texture (or LPO) itself is thought to result from shear strain in the upper mantle, which causes olivine KIRÁLY ET AL.

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