Everything about Subduction Zone totally explained
In
geology, a
subduction zone is an area on
Earth where two
tectonic plates meet and move towards one another, with one sliding underneath the other and moving down into the
mantle, at rates typically measured in centimeters per year. An
oceanic plate ordinarily slides underneath a
continental plate or another oceanic plate; this often creates an
orogenic zone or
volcanic arc subject to many
earthquakes. In a sense, subduction zones are the opposite of
divergent boundaries, areas where material rises up from the mantle and plates are moving apart.
General description
Subduction zones mark sites of convective
downwelling of the Earth's
lithosphere (the
crust plus the strong portion of the upper mantle). Subduction zones exist at convergent plate boundaries where one plate of
oceanic lithosphere converges with another plate and sinks below it to depth of approximately 100 km. At that depth the peridotite of the oceanic slab is converted to eclogite, the density of the edge of the oceanic lithosphere increases and it sinks into the
mantle. It is at subduction zones that the Earth's lithosphere,
oceanic crust,
sedimentary layers, and trapped water are recycled into the deep mantle. Earth is the only planet where subduction is known to occur. Without subduction,
plate tectonics couldn't exist and Earth would be a very different planet: Earth's crust wouldn't have differentiated into continents and oceans and all of the solid Earth would lie beneath a global ocean.
Subduction results from the difference in density between lithosphere and underlying
asthenosphere. Where, very rarely, lithosphere is denser than asthenospheric mantle, it can easily sink back into the mantle at a subduction zone; however, subduction is resisted where lithosphere is less dense than underlying asthenosphere. Whether or not lithosphere is denser than underlying asthenosphere depends on the nature of the associated crust. Crust is always less dense than asthenosphere or lithospheric mantle and continental lithosphere is always less dense than oceanic lithosphere. Exceptionally, the presence of the large areas of
flood basalt that are called
large igneous provinces (LIPs), which result in extreme thickening of the oceanic crust, can cause some sections of older oceanic lithosphere to be too buoyant to subduct. Where lithosphere on the downgoing plate is too buoyant to subduct, a collision occurs, hence the adage "Subduction leads to
orogeny".
Subduction zones are arc-shaped, with the concave side oriented away from the direction of subduction because of the curvature of the Earth. This can easily be seen by making a cut into an orange, with the knife blade representing a subducting slab.
Theory on origin
There have been some recent theories on the beginnings of subduction and Plate tectonics generally. A recent paper by V.L. Hansen in
Geology presented a hypothesis that mantle upwelling and similar thermal processes combined with an impact from an extraterrestrial source would give the early earth the discontinuities in the crust for the subduction of the denser material underneath lighter material.
Associated volcanic activity
Subduction causes
oceanic trenches, such as the
Mariana trench. Trenches occur where one plate begins its descent beneath another.
Volcanoes that occur above subduction zones, such as
Mount St. Helens and
Mount Fuji, often occur in arcuate chains, hence the term
volcanic arc or
island arc. Not all "volcanic arcs" are arced: trenches and arcs are often linear.
The
magmatism associated with the volcanic arc occurs 100-300 km away from the trench. However, a relationship has been found, which relates volcanic arc location to depth of the subducted crust as defined by the Wadati-Benioff zone. Studies of many volcanic arcs around the world have revealed that volcanic arcs tend to form at a location where the subducted slab has reached a depth of about 100 km. This has interesting implications for the mechanism that causes the magmatism at these arcs. Arcs produce about 25% of the total volume of magma produced each year on Earth (~30-35 km³), much less than the volume produced at mid-ocean ridges. Nevertheless, arc volcanism has the greatest impact on humans, because many arc volcanoes lie above sealevel and erupt violently.
Aerosols injected into the stratosphere during violent eruptions can cause rapid cooling of the Earth's
climate.
Earthquakes and tsunamis
Subduction zones are also notorious for producing devastating
earthquakes because of the intense geological activity. The introduction of cold oceanic crust into the mantle depresses the local geothermal gradient and causes a larger portion of the earth to deform in a more brittle fashion than it would in a normal geothermal gradient setting. Because earthquakes can only occur when a rock is deforming in a brittle fashion, subduction zones have the potential to create very large earthquakes. If this earthquake occurs under the ocean it has the potential to create
tsunamis, such as the earthquake caused by subduction of the
Indo-Australian Plate under the
Eurasian Plate on
December 26,
2004, that
devastated the areas around the Indian Ocean. Small tremors that create tiny, unnoticeable tsunamis happen all the time because of the dynamics of the earth.
Subduction zones are associated with the deepest
earthquakes on the planet. Earthquakes are generally restricted to the shallow, brittle parts of the crust, generally at depths of less than 20 km. However, in subduction zones, earthquakes occur at depths as great as 700 km. These earthquakes define inclined zones of seismicity known as
Wadati-Benioff zones (after the scientists who discovered them), which outline the descending lithosphere.
Seismic tomography has helped outline subducted lithosphere in regions where there are no earthquakes. Some subducted slabs seem not to be able to penetrate the major
discontinuity in the mantle that lies at a depth of about 670 km, whereas other subducted oceanic plates can penetrate all the way to the
core-mantle boundary. The great seismic discontinuities in the mantle - at 410 and 670 km depth - are disrupted by the descent of cold slabs in deep subduction zones.
Importance
Subduction zones are important for several reasons:
- Subduction Zone Physics: Sinking of mantle lithosphere is the strongest force (but not the only one) needed to drive plate motion and is the dominant mode of mantle convection.
- Subduction Zone Chemistry: The cold material sinking in subduction zones releases water into the overlying mantle, causing mantle melting and fractionating elements (buffering) between surface and deep mantle reservoirs, producing island arcs and continental crust.
- Subduction Zone Biology: Because subduction zones are the coldest parts of the Earth's interior and life can't exist at temperatures >150°C, subduction zones are almost certainly associated with the deepest (highest pressure) biosphere.
- Subduction zones mix subducted sediments, oceanic crust, and mantle lithosphere and mix this with mantle from the overriding plate to produce fluids, calc-alkaline series melts, ore deposits, and continental crust.
Subduction zones have also being considered as possible
disposal sites for nuclear waste, where the action would carry the material into the planetary
mantle, safely away from any possible influence on humanity or the surface environment, but this method of disposal is currently banned by international agreement.
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