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Vestiges of impact-driven three-phase mixing in the chemistry and structure of Earth’s mantle

Jun Korenaga, S. Marchi

2023Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Highly siderophile elements (HSEs; namely Ru, Rh, Pd, Re, Os, Ir, Pt, and Au) in Earth's mantle require the addition of metals after the formation of Earth's core. Early, large collisions have the potential to deliver metals, but the details of their mixing with Earth's mantle remain unresolved. As a large projectile disrupts and penetrates Earth's mantle, a fraction of its metallic core may directly merge with Earth's core. Ensuing gravitational instabilities remove the remaining projectile's core stranded in Earth's mantle, leaving the latter deprived of HSEs. Here, we propose a framework that can efficiently retain the metallic components during large impacts. The mechanism is based on the ubiquitous presence of a partially molten region in the mantle beneath an impact-generated magma ocean, and it involves rapid three-phase flow with solid silicate, molten silicate, and liquid metal as well as long-term mixing by mantle convection. In addition, large low-shear-velocity provinces in the lower mantle may originate from compositional heterogeneities resulting from the proposed three-phase flow during high-energy collisions.

Topics & Concepts

Mantle (geology)Mantle convectionPlanetary differentiationEarth's internal heat budgetOuter coreSilicateGeologyCore–mantle boundaryPost-perovskiteInner coreGeophysicsStructure of the EarthEarly EarthConvectionGeochemistryThermodynamicsChemistrySubductionPhysicsTectonicsOrganic chemistryPaleontologyGeological and Geochemical AnalysisHigh-pressure geophysics and materialsearthquake and tectonic studies
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