Seismic evidence for a highly heterogeneous martian mantle
Abstract
A planetâs interior is a time capsule, preserving clues to its early history. We report the discovery of kilometer-scale heterogeneities throughout Marsâ mantle, detected seismically through pronounced wavefront distortion of energy arriving from deeply probing marsquakes. These heterogeneities, likely remnants of the planetâs formation, imply a mantle that has undergone limited mixing driven by sluggish convection. Their size and survival constrain Marsâ poorly known mantle rheology, indicating a high viscosity of 1021.3 to 1021.9 pascal-seconds and low temperature dependence, with an effective activation energy of 70 to 90 kilojoules per mole, suggesting a mantle deforming by dislocation creep. The limited mixing, coupled with ubiquitous, scale-invariant heterogeneities, reflects a highly disordered mantle, characteristic of the more primitive interior evolution of a single-plate planet, contrasting sharply with the tectonically active Earth.
- Publication:
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Science
- Pub Date:
- August 2025
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 2025Sci...389..899C
- Keywords:
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- GEOCHEM PHYS; PLANET SCI