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Models that envisage successful subduction channel transport of upper crustal materials below 300 km depth, past a critical phase transition in buoyant crustal lithologies, are capable of accumulating and assembling these materials into so-called second continents that are gravitationally stabilized at the base of the Transition Zone, at some 600 to 700 km depth. Global scale, Pacific-type subduction (ocean-ocean and ocean-continent convergence), which lead to super continent assembly, were hypothesized to produce second continents that scale to about the size of Australia, with continental upper crustal concentration levels of radiogenic power. Seismological techniques are incapable of imaging these second continents because of their negligible difference in seismic wave velocities with the surrounding mantle. We can image the geoneutrino flux linked to the radioactive decays in these second continents with land and/or ocean-based detectors. We present predictions of the geoneutrino flux of second continents, assuming different scaled models and we discuss the potential of current and future neutrino experiments to discover or constrain second continents. The power emissions from second continents were proposed to be drivers of super continental cycles. Thus, testing models for the existence of second continents will place constraints on mantle and plate dynamics when using land and ocean-based geoneutrino detectors deployed at strategic locations.
Constraints on the Earths composition and on its radiogenic energy budget come from the detection of geoneutrinos. The KamLAND and Borexino experiments recently reported the geoneutrino flux, which reflects the amount and distribution of U and Th ins
Uranium and thorium are the main heat producing elements in the earth. Their quantities and distributions, which specify the flux of detectable antineutrinos generated by the beta decay of their daughter isotopes, remain unmeasured. Geological models
Gravimetric methods are expected to play a decisive role in geophysical modeling of the regional crustal structure applied to geoneutrino studies. GIGJ (GOCE Inversion for Geoneutrinos at JUNO) is a 3D numerical model constituted by ~46 x 10$^{3}$ vo
Deep-Earth volatile cycles couple the mantle with near-surface reservoirs. Volatiles are emitted by volcanism and, in particular, from mid-ocean ridges, which are the most prolific source of basaltic volcanism. Estimates of volatile extraction from t
We present evidence for an uninterrupted continuation of Indian continental lithospheric mantle into the adjoining Bay of Bengal to a distance of 400-500 km away from the passive margin. The inference is based on the shear wave velocity image of the