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Archean cratons represent stable continental domains which form the nuclei of the Earth's continents due to their thick ( >200 km), mechanically resistant keels. Cratons and their stable roots form through melt and fluid depletion processes. However, metasomatic refertilization may occur due to processes coeval with craton construction and/or overprinting episodes. Magnetotellurics, a geophysical method measuring subsurface electrical resistivity, is sensitive to the compositional and thermal states of the lithosphere and is useful in mapping depleted and refertilized cratonic domains. Here we show the results of a 3D anisotropic inversion to image the lithospheric resistivity structure of the western Superior Craton. The resistivity model reveals widespread (500×300 km) anisotropy with a north-south conductive axis at depths ~100-200 km, inferred to represent phlogopite-bearing channels emplaced during mantle plume activity. The results have implications for our understanding of the modification and long-term stability of cratonic lithosphere, and the imaging and interpretation of their preserved geophysical signatures.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-62912-6 | DOI Listing |
Nat Commun
August 2025
Simon Fraser University, Department of Earth Sciences, Burnaby, BC, Canada.
Archean cratons represent stable continental domains which form the nuclei of the Earth's continents due to their thick ( >200 km), mechanically resistant keels. Cratons and their stable roots form through melt and fluid depletion processes. However, metasomatic refertilization may occur due to processes coeval with craton construction and/or overprinting episodes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGeochem Geophys Geosyst
March 2021
Insitut de Minéralogie Physique des Matériaux et Cosmochimie (IMPMC) UMR7590 CNRS-UPMC-MNHN-IRD Paris France.
Fluid release from subducting oceanic lithosphere is a key process for subduction zone geodynamics, from controlling arc volcanism to seismicity and tectonic exhumation. However, many fundamental details of fluid composition, flow pathways, and reactivity with slab-forming rocks remain to be thoroughly understood. In this study we investigate a multi-kilometer-long, high-pressure metasomatic system preserved in the lawsonite-eclogite metamorphic unit of Alpine Corsica, France.
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