Laura Sammon

and 1 more

Earth’s internal heat drives its dynamic engine, causing mantle convection, plate tectonics, and the geodynamo. These renewing and protective processes, which make Earth habitable, are fueled by a primordial (kinetic) and radiogenic heat. For the past two decades, particle physicists have measured the flux of geoneutrinos, electron antineutrinos emitted during β − decay. These ghost-like particles provide a direct measure of the amount of heat producing elements (HPE: Th & U) in the Earth and in turn define the planet’s absolute concentration of the refractory elements. The geoneutrino flux has contributions from the lithosphere and mantle. Detector sensitivity follows a 1/r 2 (source detector separation distance) dependence. Accordingly, an accurate geologic model of the Near-Field Lithosphere (NFL, closest 500 km) surrounding each experiment is required to define the mantle’s contribution. Because of its proximity to the detector and enrichment in HPEs, the local lithosphere contributes ∼50% of the signal and has the greatest effect on interpreting the mantle’s signal. We re-analyzed the upper crustal compositional model used by Agostini et al. (2020) for the Borexino experiment. We documented the geology of the western Near-Field region as rich in potassic volcanism, including some centers within 50 km of the detector. In contrast, the Agostini study did not include these lithologies and used only a HPE-poor, carbonate-rich, model for upper crustal rocks in the surrounding ∼150 km of the Borexino experiment. Consequently, we report 3× higher U content for the local upper crust, which produces a 200% decrease in Earth’s radiogenic heat budget, when compared to their study. Results from the KamLAND and Borexino geoneutrino experiments are at odds with one another and predict mantle compositional heterogeneity that is untenable. Combined analyses of the KamLAND and Borexino experiments using our revised local models strongly favor an Earth with ∼20 TW present-day total radiogenic power. The next generation of geoneutrino detectors (SNO+, counting; and JUNO, under construction) will better constrain the HPE budget of the Earth.

Laura G Sammon

and 1 more

Debate abounds regarding the composition of the deep (middle + lower) continental crust. Studies of medium and high grade metamorphic lithologies guide us but encompass mafic (< 52 wt.%) to felsic (> 68 wt.%) compositions. This study presents a global compilation of geochemical data on amphibolite (n = 6500), granulite (n = 4000), and eclogite (n = 200) facies lithologies and quantifies systematic trends, uncertainties, and sources of bias in the deep crust sampling. The continental crust’s Daly Gap is well documented in amphibolite and most granulite facies lithologies, with eclogite facies lithologies and granulite facies xenoliths having mostly mafic compositions. Al2O3, Lu, and Yb vary little from the top to bottom of the crust. In contrast, SiO2 and incompatible elements show a wider range of abundances. Because of oversampling of mafic lithologies, our predictions are a lower bound on middle crustal composition. The distinction between granulite facies terrains (intermediate SiO2, high heat production, high incompatibles) or granulite facies xenoliths (low SiO2, low heat production, low incompatibles) as being the best analogs of the deep crust remains disputable. We incorporated both, along with amphibolite facies lithologies, to define a deep crustal composition that approaches 57.6 wt.% SiO2. This number, however, represents a compositional middle ground, as seismological studies indicate a general increase in density and seismic velocity with increasing depth. Future studies should analyze more closely the depth dependent trends in deep crustal composition so that we may develop compositional models that are not limited to a three-layer crust.

Laura G Sammon

and 2 more

Combing geochemical and seismological results constrains the composition of the middle and lower continental crust better than either field can achieve alone. The inaccessible nature of the deep crust (typically >15 km) forces reliance on analogue samples and modeling results to interpret its bulk composition, evolution, and physical properties. A common practice relates major oxide compositions of small- to medium-scale samples (e.g. medium to high metamorphic grade terrains and xenoliths) to large scale measurements of seismic velocities (Vp, Vs, Vp/Vs) to determine the composition of the deep crust. We provide a framework for building crustal models with multidisciplinary constraints on composition. We present a global deep crustal model that documents compositional changes with depth and accounts for uncertainties in Moho depth, temperature, and physical and chemical properties. Our 3D deep crust global compositional model uses the USGS global seismic database (Mooney, 2015) and a compilation of geochemical analyses on amphibolite and granulite facies lithologies (Sammon McDonough, 2021). We find a compositional gradient from 61.2 ± 7.3 to 53.8 ± 3.0 wt.% SiO2 from the middle to the base of the crust, with the equivalent lithological gradient ranging from quartz monzonite to gabbronorite. In addition, we calculate trace element abundances as a function of depth from their relationships to major oxides. From here, other lithospheric properties, such as Moho heat flux, are derived (18.8 ± 8.8 mW/m2). This study provides a global assessment of major element composition in the deep continental crust.

William F mcdonough

and 2 more

We report the Earth’s rate of radiogenic heat production and (anti)neutrino luminosity from geologically relevant short-lived radionuclides (SLR) and long-lived radionuclides (LLR) using decay constants from the geological community, updated nuclear physics parameters, and calculations of the β spectra. We carefully account for all branches in K decay using the updated β energy spectrum from physics and an updated branching ratio from geological studies. We track the time evolution of the radiogenic power and luminosity of the Earth over the last 4.57 billion years, assuming an absolute abundance for the refractory elements in the silicate Earth and key volatile/refractory element ratios (e.g., Fe/Al, K/U, and Rb/Sr) to set the abundance levels for the moderately volatile elements. The relevant decays for the present-day heat production in the Earth (19.9 ± 3.0 TW) are from K, Rb, Sm, Th, U, and U. Given element concentrations in kg-element/kg-rock and density ρ in kg/m, a simplied equation to calculate the heat production in a rock is: h [μWm] = ρ(3.387 × 10 [K] + 0.01139 [Rb] + 0.04607 [Sm] + 26.18 [Th] + 98.29 [U]) The radiogenic heating rate of earth-like material at Solar System formation was some 10 to 10 times greater than present-day values, largely due to decay of Al in the silicate fraction, which was the dominant radiogenic heat source for the first ~10My. Decay of Fe contributed a non-negligible amount of heating during the first ~15My after CAI (Calcium Aluminum Inclusion) formation, interestingly within the time frame of core{mantle segregation.