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Mercury's crustal thickness correlates with lateral variations in mantle melt production
Beuthe, M.; Charlier, B.; Namur, O.; Rivoldini, A.; Van Hoolst, T. (2020). Mercury's crustal thickness correlates with lateral variations in mantle melt production. Geophys. Res. Lett. 47(9): e2020GL087261. https://hdl.handle.net/10.1029/2020GL087261
In: Geophysical Research Letters. American Geophysical Union: Washington. ISSN 0094-8276; e-ISSN 1944-8007, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Author keywords
    Mercury; crust thickness; volcanism; mantle melting

Authors  Top 
  • Rivoldini, A., more
  • Van Hoolst, T., more

Abstract
    Over the first billion years of Mercury's history, mantle melting and surface volcanism produced a secondary magmatic crust varying spatially in composition and mineralogy. By combining geochemical mapping from MESSENGER with laboratory experiments on partial melting, we translate the surface mineralogy into lateral variations of surface density and calculate the degree of mantle melting required to produce surface rocks. If lateral density variations extend through the whole crust, the local crustal thickness correlates well with the degree of mantle melting. Low-degree mantle melting produced a thin crust below the northern volcanic plains (19±3 km), whereas high-degree melting produced the thickest crust in the ancient high-Mg region (50±12 km), refuting the hypothesis of an impact origin for that region. The thickness-melting correlation has also been observed for the oceanic crust on Earth and might be a common feature of secondary crust formation on terrestrial planets.

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