Abstract

AbstractUnderstanding the composition of lavas erupted at the surface of the Earth is key to reconstruct the long‐term history of our planet. Recent geochemical analyses of ocean island basalt samples indicate the preservation of ancient mantle heterogeneities dating from the earliest stages of Earth's evolution (Péron & Moreira, 2018, https://doi.org/10.7185/geochemlet.1833), when a global magma ocean was present. Such observations contrast with fluid dynamics studies which demonstrated that in a magma ocean the convective motions, primarily driven by buoyancy, are extremely vigorous (Gastine et al., 2016, https://doi.org/10.1017/jfm.2016.659) and are therefore expected to mix heterogeneities within just a few minutes (Thomas et al., 2023, https://doi.org/10.1093/gji/ggad452). To elucidate this paradox we explored the effects of the Earth's rapid rotation on the stirring efficiency of a magma ocean, by performing state‐of‐the‐art fluid dynamics simulations of low‐viscosity, turbulent convective dynamics in a spherical shell. We found that rotational effects drastically affect the convective structure and the associated stirring efficiency. Rotation leads to the emergence of three domains with limited mass exchanges, and distinct stirring and cooling efficiencies. Still, efficient convective stirring within each region likely results in homogenization within each domain on timescales that are short compared with the solidification timescales of a magma ocean. However, the lack of mass exchange between these regions could lead to three or four large‐scale domains with internally homogeneous, but distinct compositions. The existence of these separate regions in a terrestrial magma ocean suggests a new mechanism to preserve distinct geochemical signatures dating from the earliest stages of Earth's evolution.

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