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Geological Society, London, Special Publications; 2004; v. 227; p. 327-336;
DOI: 10.1144/GSL.SP.2004.227.01.17
© 2004 Geological Society of London

Melts and Crustal Rheology

Strain-rate-dependent rheology of partially molten rocks

J. L. Vigneresse1 & J. P. Burg2

1 CREGU, UMR CNRS 7566 G2R, BP 23, F-54501 Vandoeuvre Cedex, France jean-louis.vigneresse{at}g2r.uhp-nancy.fr
2 Geologisches Institut, ETH-Zentrum, Sonneggstrasse 5, CH-8006 Zurich, Switzerland jpb{at}erdw.ethz.ch

Coupling or decoupling in the lithosphere is often related to the absence or the presence of a layer of partially molten rocks, although the rheology of such rocks remains unsolved. Theoretical arguments correlated with structural observations provide new insights into the rheology of partially molten rocks, namely migmatites and magma. These rocks are simplified to two-phase pseudo-fluids constituted of a quasi-solid matrix and a variable amount of melt. Previous experiments indicate that the matrix deforms plastically according to a power law. The melt is Newtonian and weakens at high shear strain rates. Because of the heterogeneous distribution of matrix and melt phases, their rheologies cannot be averaged to obtain the rock rheology. Four behaviours are identified. (i) At high stress and strain rates, the viscosity contrast between melt and matrix is lowest. Both phases can accommodate strain at a comparable rate, allowing migmatite and magma bodies to deform as quasi-solid units. (ii) At low strain rates, the viscosity contrast between melt and matrix is highest. Melt deforms and relaxes much faster than the matrix. The simultaneous coexistence of a weak and a strong phase is expressed in a 3D viscosity-strain rate-melt fraction diagram, in which a cusp-shaped surface represents viscosity. The cusp graphically shows that the viscosity of partially molten rocks may jump several orders of magnitude. These jumps, leading to sudden melt segregation, are temporally erratic. (iii) At low strain rates, strain partitioning may lead to internal instabilities and segregation between melt and restitic phases, as observed in the leucosome/melanosome separation. (iv) Cyclic processes follow hysteresis loops and trigger strain localization.