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Coblentz et al. 1994
Coblentz, D.D., Richardson, R.M. and Sandiford, M. (1994). On the gravitational potential of the Earth’s lithosphere. Tectonics 13: doi: 10.1029/94TC01033. issn: 0278-7407.

The mean potential energy of the lithosphere Ugl is useful for defining the tectonic reference state (TRS) of the Earth and can be used to constrain the ambient state of stress in the plates. In the absence of external forces applied at the base or along plate boundaries a lithospheric column with the potential energy of the TRS would remain undeformed. Thus the difference between the potential energy of a lithospheric column and the TRS determines whether the column is in an extensional, neutral, or compressional state of stress. We evaluate Ugl and intraplate variations about this mean, using a simple, first-order lithospheric density model. This model assumed that the continental geotherm is linear, and density variations below a depth of 125 km have negligible influence on Ugl, and is consistent with observed geoid anomalies across continental margins. Ugl is estimated to be 2.379¿1014 N m-1, which is equivalent to the potential energy of both near sea level continental lithosphere (-160 to +220 m for an assumed crustal density, &rgr;c, in the range 2800--2700 kg m-3) and cooling oceanic lithosphere at a depth of 4.3 km. With the exception of Eurasia, which has anomalously high mean potential energy (Upl = 2.383 ¿ 1014 N m-1), the mean potential energies of the continental plates are nearly identical to the global mean Ugl. The mean potential of the oceanic plates was found to be a strong function of the mean age of the oceanic lithosphere.

Both the global and plate mean potential energies are relatively insensitive to a wide range in &rgr;c. The potential of the mid-ocean ridges ( UlMOR), 2.391¿1014 N m-1, is greater than the global mean, which is consistent with the divergent nature of the ridges. Elevated continental lithosphere with a height of about 70 m has an equivalent potential energy to Ugl, suggesting that in the absence of external forces, continental regions will be in a slightly extensional state of stress. The importance of our potential energy formulation is substantiated by the strong correlation between the torque poles associated with the potential energy distributions and the observed plate velocity poles for the South American, Nazca, Indo-Australian, and Pacific plates. ¿ American Geophysical Union 1994

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Abstract

Keywords
Tectonophysics, Dynamics of lithosphere and mantle—general, Tectonophysics, Continental tectonics—general
Journal
Tectonics
Publisher
American Geophysical Union
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