Pietro Sternai
California Institute of Technology
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Featured researches published by Pietro Sternai.
Geophysical Research Letters | 2016
Pietro Sternai; Luca Caricchi; Sébastien Castelltort; Jean-Daniel Champagnac
Glacial-interglacial cycles affect the processes through which water and rocks are redistributed across the Earths surface, thereby linking the solid Earth and climate dynamics. Regional and global scale studies suggest that continental lithospheric unloading due to ice melting during the transition to interglacials leads to increased continental magmatic, volcanic, and degassing activity. Such a climatic forcing on the melting of the Earths interior, however, has always been evaluated regardless of continental unloading by glacial erosion, albeit the density of rock exceeds that of ice by approximately 3 times. Here we present and discuss numerical results involving synthetic but realistic topographies, ice caps, and glacial erosion rates suggesting that erosion may be as important as deglaciation in affecting continental unloading. Our study represents an additional step toward a more general understanding of the links between a changing climate, glacial processes, and the melting of the solid Earth.
Nature Geoscience | 2017
Pietro Sternai; Luca Caricchi; Daniel Garcia-Castellanos; Laurent Jolivet; Thomas Edward Sheldrake; Sébastien Castelltort
Between 5 and 6 million years ago, during the so-called Messinian salinity crisis, the Mediterranean basin became a giant salt repository. The possibility of abrupt and kilometre-scale sea-level changes during this extreme event is debated. Messinian evaporites could signify either deep- or shallow-marine deposits, and ubiquitous erosional surfaces could indicate either subaerial or submarine features. Significant and fast reductions in sea level unload the lithosphere, which can increase the production and eruption of magma. Here we calculate variations in surface load associated with the Messinian salinity crisis and compile the available time constraints for pan-Mediterranean magmatism. We show that scenarios involving a kilometre-scale drawdown of sea level imply a phase of net overall lithospheric unloading at a time that appears synchronous with a magmatic pulse from the pan-Mediterranean igneous provinces. We verify the viability of a mechanistic link between unloading and magmatism using numerical modelling of decompression partial mantle melting and dike formation in response to surface load variations. We conclude that the Mediterranean magmatic record provides an independent validation of the controversial kilometre-scale evaporative drawdown and sheds new light on the sensitivity of magmatic systems to the surface forcing.
Tectonics | 2018
Laurent Jolivet; Claudio Faccenna; Thorsten W. Becker; Magdala Tesauro; Pietro Sternai; Pierre Bouilhol
Abstract The formation of mountain belts or rift zones is commonly attributed to interactions between plates along their boundaries, but the widely distributed deformation of Asia from Himalaya to the Japan Sea and other back‐arc basins is difficult to reconcile with this notion. Through comparison of the tectonic and kinematic records of the last 50 Ma with seismic tomography and anisotropy models, we show that the closure of the former Tethys Ocean and the extensional deformation of East Asia can be best explained if the asthenospheric mantle transporting India northward, forming the Himalaya and the Tibetan Plateau, reaches East Asia where it overrides the westward flowing Pacific mantle and contributes to subduction dynamics, distributing extensional deformation over a 3,000‐km wide region. This deep asthenospheric flow partly controls the compressional stresses transmitted through the continent‐continent collision, driving crustal thickening below the Himalayas and Tibet and the propagation of strike‐slip faults across Asian lithosphere further north and east, as well as with the lithospheric and crustal flow powered by slab retreat east of the collision zone below East and SE Asia. The main shortening direction in the deforming continent between the collision zone and the Pacific subduction zones may in this case be a proxy for the direction of flow in the asthenosphere underneath, which may become a useful tool for studying mantle flow in the distant past. Our model of the India‐Asia collision emphasizes the role of asthenospheric flow underneath continents and may offer alternative ways of understanding tectonic processes.
Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2014
Pietro Sternai; Laurent Jolivet; Armel Menant; Taras V. Gerya
Tectonophysics | 2015
Laurent Jolivet; Armel Menant; Pietro Sternai; Aurélien Rabillard; Laurent Arbaret; Romain Augier; Valentin Laurent; Alexandre Beaudoin; Bernhard Grasemann; Benjamin Huet; Loïc Labrousse; Laetitia Le Pourhiet
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2011
Pietro Sternai; Frédéric Herman; Matthew Fox; Sébastien Castelltort
Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2016
Armel Menant; Pietro Sternai; Laurent Jolivet; Laurent Guillou-Frottier; Taras V. Gerya
Tectonophysics | 2015
Chao Lei; Jianye Ren; Pietro Sternai; Matthew Fox; Sean D. Willett; Xinong Xie; Peter D. Clift; Jihua Liao; Zhengfeng Wang
Journal of Geodynamics | 2016
Pietro Sternai; Jean-Philippe Avouac; Laurent Jolivet; Claudio Faccenna; Taras V. Gerya; Thorsten W. Becker; Armel Menant
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences | 2016
Laurent Jolivet; Claudio Faccenna; Philippe Agard; Dominique Frizon de Lamotte; Armel Menant; Pietro Sternai; François Guillocheau