This research presents the discovery of a kink in the frequency-size distribution of plate angular velocities in different reference frames, a feature not predicted by current physical models of plate tectonics. We analyze global plate motions to investigate the origin of this scaling break and find that larger plates systematically exhibit slower angular velocities than smaller ones. Moreover, we explore the relationship between plate velocities and the physical properties of the lithospheric basal layers, revealing that faster-moving plates correlate with more homogeneous lid rheology and structure, as inferred from reduced P-wave velocity variability. A significant negative correlation between angular velocity and latitude is observed with a persistent west-ward residual drift suggesting the long-term influence of large-scale forcings determining asymmetric mantle flows with respect to the outer layers of the planet. Based on these findings, we propose two possible reasons to explain the observed plate velocity scaling break. The first one suggests different dominant driving mechanisms for large and small plates resulting in a two-tier plate tectonics with a threshold in the range 10 km; an alternative explanation is the presence of a substantial bias in currently assumed hotspot reference frames with respect to the true mantle-reference plate motions to be recovered through a net westward rotation of °/Myr.

On the plate velocity scaling break / Zaccagnino, Davide; Cuffaro, Marco; Ficini, Eleonora; Doglioni, Carlo. - In: SCIENTIFIC REPORTS. - ISSN 2045-2322. - 15:1(2025). [10.1038/s41598-025-31301-w]

On the plate velocity scaling break

Zaccagnino, Davide
Primo
;
Ficini, Eleonora;Doglioni, Carlo
Ultimo
2025

Abstract

This research presents the discovery of a kink in the frequency-size distribution of plate angular velocities in different reference frames, a feature not predicted by current physical models of plate tectonics. We analyze global plate motions to investigate the origin of this scaling break and find that larger plates systematically exhibit slower angular velocities than smaller ones. Moreover, we explore the relationship between plate velocities and the physical properties of the lithospheric basal layers, revealing that faster-moving plates correlate with more homogeneous lid rheology and structure, as inferred from reduced P-wave velocity variability. A significant negative correlation between angular velocity and latitude is observed with a persistent west-ward residual drift suggesting the long-term influence of large-scale forcings determining asymmetric mantle flows with respect to the outer layers of the planet. Based on these findings, we propose two possible reasons to explain the observed plate velocity scaling break. The first one suggests different dominant driving mechanisms for large and small plates resulting in a two-tier plate tectonics with a threshold in the range 10 km; an alternative explanation is the presence of a substantial bias in currently assumed hotspot reference frames with respect to the true mantle-reference plate motions to be recovered through a net westward rotation of °/Myr.
2025
geodynamic forces; microplates; plate motions; plate velocity
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
On the plate velocity scaling break / Zaccagnino, Davide; Cuffaro, Marco; Ficini, Eleonora; Doglioni, Carlo. - In: SCIENTIFIC REPORTS. - ISSN 2045-2322. - 15:1(2025). [10.1038/s41598-025-31301-w]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1758405
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