LRS – Lectures organized by related scientific societies

EGU26-5243 | Orals | LRS1 | Highlight

Glacial isostatic adjustment – the spider in the geo-web 

Rebekka Steffen

Glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA) is the response of the Earth to ice-mass changes associated with glacial loading and unloading. GIA affects the entire Earth system, from the surface down to the core-mantle boundary and from the poles to the equator, spanning timescales from decades to glacial-interglacial periods. It is well known for the ongoing uplift observed in northern Europe and North America, but also for its contribution to past and present sea-level changes. The uplift signal is detected by various geodetic techniques and plays an important role in the interpretation of crustal deformation, vertical land motion, and reference frame stability.

A less well-known effect of GIA is the triggering of earthquakes. These earthquakes are known to have occurred in stable cratons during and after the last glaciation along so-called glacially induced faults. Evidence for such faults has been found across large parts of northern Europe, Greenland and Canada. These earthquakes occur due to stress changes associated with variations in ice-mass loading. GIA-related stresses can persist in regions currently and formerly covered by ice sheets or glaciers, as well as in areas surrounding former ice margins. Even at distances of 200 km or more from the maximum ice margin, GIA-induced stresses can lead to the reactivation of pre-existing faults and the occurrence of glacially triggered earthquakes. These long-lasting stress changes are particularly relevant for the assessment of nuclear waste repositories in regions that are close to, or have previously been covered by, ice sheets, as GIA-related stresses may prevail for several thousands of years after deglaciation.

All these signals, derived from geodesy, tectonics and other disciplines, provide complementary constraints on the GIA process. The interpretation of these observations requires a geodynamic model that simulates the viscoelastic response of the Earth to changing ice loads. These models incorporate lateral and depth-dependent variations in lithospheric thickness and mantle viscosity. By jointly considering multiple observational datasets, these models allow us to assess the sensitivity of GIA signals to Earth structure and to better quantify uncertainties in model estimates.

In this presentation, I will show the current state of GIA research, with an emphasis on the use of geodynamic models for geodetic observations and the analysis of stress changes that improve our understanding of glacially triggered earthquakes. I will present several examples of glacially induced faulting activity and discuss the application of GIA models in the context of nuclear waste repository site selection. Together, these examples highlight the role of GIA in linking geodynamics, geodesy, and tectonics.

How to cite: Steffen, R.: Glacial isostatic adjustment – the spider in the geo-web, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5243, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5243, 2026.

EGU26-6129 | ECS | Orals | LRS2

Hydrogen isotope fractionation during core formation of terrestrial planets 

Wenzhong Wang, Yu Zhang, Zhengbin Deng, Zhongqing Wu, and Bowen Chen

Water strongly modulates the physical and chemical properties of planetary materials, influencing mantle convection, magmatism, and plate tectonics, and thus Earth’s habitability (1). Despite its importance, the timing and mechanism of Earth’s water acquisition remain unresolved. Competing models invoke late delivery by volatile-rich bodies (2), inheritance from water-bearing enstatite chondrites (3), or incorporation of hydrogen from a nebular H₂-rich environment during early accretion (4). Hydrogen isotopes provide a powerful tracer for distinguishing among these scenarios, yet their interpretation is complicated by large-scale hydrogen partitioning during core formation.

Geochemical and geophysical evidence indicates that more than 75% of Earth’s hydrogen was sequestered into the metallic core during differentiation (5, 6), making the core the planet’s largest hydrogen reservoir. Consequently, the bulk Earth’s hydrogen isotope composition depends critically on hydrogen isotope fractionation between silicate and metallic melts at core-forming pressures and temperatures. However, this key fractionation factor remains poorly constrained.

Here, we address this long-standing problem by combining first-principles calculations with machine-learning–accelerated path-integral molecular dynamics to quantify equilibrium hydrogen isotope fractionation between silicate and metallic melts under core-forming conditions. Our simulations explicitly capture nuclear quantum effects and extend to pressures and temperatures relevant to Earth’s early magma ocean and core formation. We incorporate these fractionation factors into models of hydrogen isotope evolution during planetary differentiation and accretion, allowing us to reconstruct the bulk Earth’s D/H ratio. These results provide new constraints on the sources of Earth’s water and clarify the role of metal–silicate equilibration in shaping the planet’s volatile inventory during its earliest history.

References

1. K. Regenauer-Lieb, Water and geodynamics. Rev. Mineral. Geochem. 62, 451-473 (2006)

2. Z. Wang, H. Becker, Ratios of S, Se, and Te in the silicate Earth require a volatile-rich late veneer. Nature 499, 328-331 (2013).

3. L. Piani, Y. Marrocchi, T. Rigaudier, L. G. Vacher, D. Thomassin, B. Marty, Earth's water may have been inherited from material similar to enstatite chondrite meteorites. Science 369, 1110-1113 (2020).

4. E. D. Young, A. Shahar, H. E. Schlichting, Earth shaped by primordial H2 atmospheres. Nature 616, 306-311 (2023).

5. S. Tagawa, N. Sakamoto, K. Hirose, S. Yokoo, J. Hernlund, Y. Ohishi, H. Yurimoto, Experimental evidence for hydrogen incorporation into Earth's core. Nat Commun 12, 2588 (2021).

6. Y. Li, L. Vocadlo, T. Sun, J. P. Brodholt, The Earth's core as a reservoir of water. Nat. Geosci. 13, 453-458 (2020).

How to cite: Wang, W., Zhang, Y., Deng, Z., Wu, Z., and Chen, B.: Hydrogen isotope fractionation during core formation of terrestrial planets, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6129, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6129, 2026.

EGU26-15162 | ECS | Orals | LRS2

The importance of sulfur in the generation of basaltic magmas 

Michelle Muth

The fate of sulfur in magmatic systems influences a wide range of processes including chalcophile element behavior, magma redox evolution, and volcanic degassing. However, understanding sulfur behavior can be complicated by the presence of multiple sulfur valence states (S2- and S6+) in silicate melts. The transition from S2- to S6+ occurs over a narrow range of oxygen fugacities (fO2) such that small changes in melt fO2 may significantly impact sulfur transport and its partitioning between minerals, silicate melt, and vapor. In recent years, we have learned much more about the dependence of this transition on temperature and melt composition, but the effect of pressure remains poorly constrained.

Here, we present a new suite of experiments allowing us to quantify the effect of pressure on mafic silicate melts. We integrate these experimental results with existing calibrations to explore how sulfur-iron redox equilibria influences the generation of basaltic magmas. Using a simplified mantle melting and melt extraction model, we show that sulfur valence state remains relatively stable during mantle melting and extraction. However, we also show that sulfur and iron continuously exchange electrons during melt ascent, leading to a small but non-negligible change to fO2 relative to the QFM buffer. This example showcases the importance of integrating sulfur-iron redox equilibria into petrologic models, and how we can leverage recent advances in analytical and experimental methodologies to do so accurately.

How to cite: Muth, M.: The importance of sulfur in the generation of basaltic magmas, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15162, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15162, 2026.

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