The viscoelastic relaxation of a realistically stratified earth, and a further analysis of postglacial rebound

We discuss the isostatic adjustment of the earth in response to Pleistocene deglaciation, and derive constraints on the earth's viscosity profile. We model the earth as viscoelastic, self-gravitating, realistically stratified and spherically symmetric. It is shown that the earth's relaxati...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Geophysical Journal International
Main Authors: Han, Dazhong, Wahr, John
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 1995
Subjects:
Online Access:http://gji.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/120/2/287
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-246X.1995.tb01819.x
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Summary:We discuss the isostatic adjustment of the earth in response to Pleistocene deglaciation, and derive constraints on the earth's viscosity profile. We model the earth as viscoelastic, self-gravitating, realistically stratified and spherically symmetric. It is shown that the earth's relaxation eigenspectrum, besides possessing a small set of well-known discrete modes, also includes infinitely dense sets of modes (a continuous spectrum) which separate into classes that depend on the principal restoring force of the mode. Methods for estimating the continuous spectrum are discussed, and the effects on the predicted uplift are assessed. We find that the effects of the continuous spectrum are far less important than those of the discrete modes, though the presence of the continuous spectrum can make the discrete modes more difficult to identify. The continuous spectrum does become important when computing the rebound due to more recent loading, such as might be associated with present-day changes in polar ice. We use our model to refine predictions of the earth's response to Pleistocene glacial loading, with particular emphasis on implications for mantle viscosity. We have used time histories that are consistent with the recently recalibrated 14 C time-scale. A special effort is made to match the geologic records of sea-level at sites in the vicinity of Hudson Bay. We find, consistent with the results of other authors, that the curvatures of the records are sensitive indicators of lower-mantle viscosity, but that there are inconsistencies between the records at different sites. However, we find we are also able to change the predicted curvatures by modifying the temporal and spatial distribution of the ice loads. If we assume a factor of 50 increase in viscosity between the upper and lower mantles, and if we assume that the ice on the eastern side of Hudson Bay melted a few thousand years later than the ice on the western side (a result consistent with recent geologic evidence), we are able to match the observed ...