The mechanics of granitoid systems and maximum entropy production rates.

Philos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci

CSIRO Exploration and Mining, PO Box 1130, Bentley, WA 6102, Australia.

Published: January 2010

AI Article Synopsis

  • A model is proposed for granitoid system formation, relying on melt production beneath a rising isotherm that marks when melting begins.
  • The behavior of the entire granitoid system is controlled by the velocity of melt advection, which affects the amounts of melt produced and how it flows through conduits.
  • The interplay of melt viscosity, deformation, and topography leads to both vertical and horizontal melt movement, influencing the size and timing of pluton emplacement while optimizing energy and thermal processes within the system.

Article Abstract

A model for the formation of granitoid systems is developed involving melt production spatially below a rising isotherm that defines melt initiation. Production of the melt volumes necessary to form granitoid complexes within 10(4)-10(7) years demands control of the isotherm velocity by melt advection. This velocity is one control on the melt flux generated spatially just above the melt isotherm, which is the control valve for the behaviour of the complete granitoid system. Melt transport occurs in conduits initiated as sheets or tubes comprising melt inclusions arising from Gurson-Tvergaard constitutive behaviour. Such conduits appear as leucosomes parallel to lineations and foliations, and ductile and brittle dykes. The melt flux generated at the melt isotherm controls the position of the melt solidus isotherm and hence the physical height of the Transport/Emplacement Zone. A conduit width-selection process, driven by changes in melt viscosity and constitutive behaviour, operates within the Transport Zone to progressively increase the width of apertures upwards. Melt can also be driven horizontally by gradients in topography; these horizontal fluxes can be similar in magnitude to vertical fluxes. Fluxes induced by deformation can compete with both buoyancy and topographic-driven flow over all length scales and results locally in transient 'ponds' of melt. Pluton emplacement is controlled by the transition in constitutive behaviour of the melt/magma from elastic-viscous at high temperatures to elastic-plastic-viscous approaching the melt solidus enabling finite thickness plutons to develop. The system involves coupled feedback processes that grow at the expense of heat supplied to the system and compete with melt advection. The result is that limits are placed on the size and time scale of the system. Optimal characteristics of the system coincide with a state of maximum entropy production rate.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsta.2009.0202DOI Listing

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