ESCAPE_PLANET_X t1_j1bxnsz wrote
Reply to comment by UncleVinny in ‘Mind-blowing’ network of magma chambers found under Hawaii’s volcanoes - The discovery offers a possible solution to a long-standing mystery — how magma from the deep mantle travels to the Hawaiian surface by GeoGeoGeoGeo
I got paywalled but I thought this image was helpful in my rather limited understanding of the discovery.
WiartonWilly t1_j1dzal3 wrote
Fig. 6. Cartoon summarizing observations. Eruptions and intrusions at Kīlauea cause pressure gradients to rapidly propagate through the Kīlauea transport structure to the Pāhala sill complex. Magma is injected into the Pāhala sill complex from the underlying magma- bearing volume; the sills are proximal to the plagioclase-spinel phase boundary, possibly in a polyphase coexistence region. The sills are connected to Kīlauea and the decollement/Ka‘ōiki region within the Mauna Loa edifice along continuous bands of seismicity.
GeoGeoGeoGeo OP t1_j1g458e wrote
What I find interesting is the fault(s) depicted in the mantle. At those depths, beyond the brittle-ductile transition I would have expected the rocks to deform plastically as opposed to brittle deformation. Is it mylonitic? Can mylonites have seismicity?
Edit:
As previously assumed, brittle deformation doesn't occur in the lithospheric mantle so I think it's assumed that seismic anisotropic reflectors (generated from crystallographic preferred orientations) in the lithospheric mantle arise from grain size reduction via dislocation and diffusion creep along grain boundaries. These seismic anisotropic reflectors are thus interpreted as fine grained mylonitic shear zones and thus downward extensions of brittle faults across the brittle-ductile transition from the crust into the mantle.
Now I'm curious as to how these mantle shear zones, a ductile feature in a ductile regime, remain long lived enough to act as pathways for magma ascent...
[deleted] t1_j1bzr6h wrote
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