Compaction-Driven Fluid Localization as an Explanation for Lower Crustal Electrical Conductors in an Intracontinental Setting

Journal Article (2020)
Author(s)

Matthew Joseph Comeau (Universität Münster)

Michael Becken (Universität Münster)

James A.D. Connolly (ETH Zürich)

A. V. Grayver (ETH Zürich)

A.V. Kuvshinov (ETH Zürich)

Affiliation
External organisation
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1029/2020GL088455
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Publication Year
2020
Language
English
Affiliation
External organisation
Issue number
19
Volume number
47

Abstract

We present electrical resistivity models, derived from magnetotelluric data, of the crust beneath the Bulnay region, Mongolia. They reveal that the lower crust contains a pattern of discrete zones (width of ~25 km) of low resistivity (<30 Ωm). Such features may be an effect of unaccounted-for electrical anisotropy. However, when anisotropy is considered in the modeling, the features remain. We investigate an alternative explanation, based on a conceptual model of fluid localization and stagnation by thermally activated compaction, and demonstrate it is compatible with the observed low-resistivity zones. The model explains the location, shape, and size of the zones, with plausible values of the activation energy for lower crustal creep (270–360 kJ/mol), and a viscous compaction length on the order of 10 km. The results imply tectonic deformation and compaction processes, rather than lithological-structural heterogeneity, control the regional lower crustal fluid flow.

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