Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Brendan Dyck is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Brendan Dyck.


Nature | 2017

The divergent fates of primitive hydrospheric water on Earth and Mars

Jon Wade; Brendan Dyck; Richard M. Palin; James Daniel Paul Moore; Andrew J. Smye

Despite active transport into Earth’s mantle, water has been present on our planet’s surface for most of geological time. Yet water disappeared from the Martian surface soon after its formation. Although some of the water on Mars was lost to space via photolysis following the collapse of the planet’s magnetic field, the widespread serpentinization of Martian crust suggests that metamorphic hydration reactions played a critical part in the sequestration of the crust. Here we quantify the relative volumes of water that could be removed from each planet’s surface via the burial and metamorphism of hydrated mafic crusts, and calculate mineral transition-induced bulk-density changes at conditions of elevated pressure and temperature for each. The metamorphic mineral assemblages in relatively FeO-rich Martian lavas can hold about 25 per cent more structurally bound water than those in metamorphosed terrestrial basalts, and can retain it at greater depths within Mars. Our calculations suggest that in excess of 9 per cent by volume of the Martian mantle may contain hydrous mineral species as a consequence of surface reactions, compared to about 4 per cent by volume of Earth’s mantle. Furthermore, neither primitive nor evolved hydrated Martian crust show noticeably different bulk densities compared to their anhydrous equivalents, in contrast to hydrous mafic terrestrial crust, which transforms to denser eclogite upon dehydration. This would have allowed efficient overplating and burial of early Martian crust in a stagnant-lid tectonic regime, in which the lithosphere comprised a single tectonic plate, with only the warmer, lower crust involved in mantle convection. This provided an important sink for hydrospheric water and a mechanism for oxidizing the Martian mantle. Conversely, relatively buoyant mafic crust and hotter geothermal gradients on Earth reduced the potential for upper-mantle hydration early in its geological history, leading to water being retained close to its surface, and thus creating conditions conducive for the evolution of complex multicellular life.


Geoscience frontiers | 2016

Quantifying geological uncertainty in metamorphic phase equilibria modelling; a Monte Carlo assessment and implications for tectonic interpretations

Richard M. Palin; Owen M. Weller; D. J. Waters; Brendan Dyck


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2012

Searching for giant, ancient impact structures on earth: the Mesoarchaean Maniitsoq structure, West Greenland

Adam A. Garde; Iain McDonald; Brendan Dyck; Nynke Keulen


Lithos | 2015

Exhumation of an eclogite terrane as a hot migmatitic nappe, Sveconorwegian orogen

Charlotte Möller; Jenny Andersson; Brendan Dyck; Ildikó Antal Lundin


Journal of Metamorphic Geology | 2014

Phase equilibria modelling of retrograde amphibole and clinozoisite in mafic eclogite from the Tso Morari massif, northwest India: constraining the P–T–M(H2O) conditions of exhumation

Richard M. Palin; M. R. St-Onge; D. J. Waters; Michael P. Searle; Brendan Dyck


Precambrian Research | 2014

The Finnefjeld domain, Maniitsoq structure, West Greenland: Differential rheological features and mechanical homogenisation in response to impacting?

Adam A. Garde; Brendan Dyck; Kim H. Esbensen; Leif Johansson; Charlotte Möller


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2013

Reply on "searching for giant, ancient impact structures on Earth: the Mesoarchaean Maniitsoq structure, West Greenland" by Garde et al. [Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 337-338 (2012) 197-210]

Adam A. Garde; Iain McDonald; Brendan Dyck; Nynke Keulen


Tectonophysics | 2017

Ductile shearing to brittle thrusting along the Nepal Himalaya: Linking Miocene channel flow and critical wedge tectonics to 25th April 2015 Gorkha earthquake

Michael P. Searle; Jean-Philippe Avouac; J. R. Elliott; Brendan Dyck


Geoscience frontiers | 2018

Deconvolving the pre-Himalayan Indian margin – Tales of crustal growth and destruction

Christopher J. Spencer; Brendan Dyck; Catherine M. Mottram; Nick M.W. Roberts; Wei-Hua Yao; Erin L. Martin


Archive | 2015

Ptarmigan Fiord basement-cover thrust imbricates, Baffin Island, Nunavut

T C Chadwick; Marc R. St-Onge; Owen M. Weller; S D Carr; Brendan Dyck

Collaboration


Dive into the Brendan Dyck's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Adam A. Garde

Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. R. St-Onge

Geological Survey of Canada

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nynke Keulen

Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nicole Rayner

Geological Survey of Canada

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Owen M. Weller

Geological Survey of Canada

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge