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Modeling melting of the Martian mantle and crust-mantle differentiation with global thermochemical evolution models
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  • Max Collinet,
  • Ana-Catalina Plesa,
  • Thomas Ruedas,
  • Sabrina Schwinger,
  • Doris Breuer
Max Collinet
German Aerospace Center (DLR)

Corresponding Author:max.collinet@dlr.de

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Ana-Catalina Plesa
German Aerospace Center (DLR)
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Thomas Ruedas
German Aerospace Center (DLR)
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Sabrina Schwinger
German Aerospace Center (DLR)
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Doris Breuer
German Aerospace Center (DLR)
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Abstract

Basaltic melts are produced when convection adiabatically brings deep and hot mantle to lower pressures. Such primary melts were extracted from the mantle of Mars, crystallized near the surface and progressively built the Martian crust. This process displaced a large fraction of the heat producing elements from the mantle to the crust and created an insulating layer that slowed down further cooling of the mantle. The complex crust-mantle system controlled many aspects of the geologic history of Mars, including the development of an atmosphere and whether conditions favorable to life could have existed. Our knowledge of the mineralogy, chemical composition and physical properties of the crust of Mars is rapidly expanding. Global geodynamical models can be used to interpret the available data and constrain the processes of crust-mantle differentiation. However, existing models still treat melting in a simplified way. For example, the degree of melting is often assumed to increase linearly above the solidus temperature, while the density of the residue is assumed to decrease linearly. Calculating the density of the residual mantle more accurately is critical because the compositional buoyancy that develops during partial melting fundamentally modifies mantle dynamics. Here, we present an improved parametrization of partial melting of the Martian mantle, which will be combined with the convection code Gaia. We created a new empirical model of melting that calculates the composition of the extracted melts and, when combined to thermodynamic models (e.g., Perple_X), the density of the corresponding residual mantle. Another advantage of the new melting parametrization is that the major-element composition of partial melts can be tracked and used to constrain the petrogenesis of surface rocks. Preliminary results will be compared to available Martian rocks believed to represent primary mantle melts or melts affected by minor fractional crystallization.