NASA Logo

NTRS

NTRS - NASA Technical Reports Server

Back to Results
Water Content of Earth's Continental Mantle Is Controlled by the Circulation of Fluids or MeltsA key mission of the ARES Directorate at JSC is to constrain models of the formation and geological history of terrestrial planets. Water is a crucial parameter to be measured with the aim to determine its amount and distribution in the interior of Earth, Mars, and the Moon. Most of that "water" is not liquid water per se, but rather hydrogen dissolved as a trace element in the minerals of the rocks at depth. Even so, the middle layer of differentiated planets, the mantle, occupies such a large volume and mass of each planet that when it is added at the planetary scale, oceans worth of water could be stored in its interior. The mantle is where magmas originate. Moreover, on Earth, the mantle is where the boundary between tectonic plates and the underlying asthenosphere is located. Even if mantle rocks in Earth typically contain less than 200 ppm H2O, such small quantities have tremendous influence on how easily they melt (i.e., the more water there is, the more magma is produced) and deform (the more water there is, the less viscous they are). These two properties alone emphasize that to understand the distribution of volcanism and the mechanism of plate tectonics, the water content of the mantle must be determined - Earth being a template to which all other terrestrial planets can be compared.
Document ID
20150003798
Acquisition Source
Johnson Space Center
Document Type
Other
Authors
Peslier, Anne
(Jacobs Technology, Inc. Houston, TX, United States)
Woodland, Alan B.
(Johann-Wolfgang-Goethe-Univ. Frankfurt am Main, Germany)
Bell, David R.
(Arizona State Univ. Tempe, AZ, United States)
Lazarov, Marina
(Technische Univ. Hanover, Germany)
Lapen, Thomas J.
(Houston Univ. Houston, TX, United States)
Date Acquired
March 27, 2015
Publication Date
January 1, 2014
Publication Information
Publication: ARES Biennial Report 2012 Final
Subject Category
Geophysics
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
No Preview Available