--Baumgardner's simulations appear to argue differently. Clearly there is a limit to the strain rate, but it hasent been well substantiated that this, as an inconsistency, can be conclusively derived from runaway subduction. So, are the deformation rates seen in Baumgardner's runaway simulations in disagreement with strain rate limitations? Surely this is applicable in a case such as what lucaspa mentioned in his last post, but can you apply this directly to CPT?
It is true that frictional melting, once it starts will be an excellent lubricant. But if frictional melting had provided the lubrication necessary for CPT, once again I would expect evidence of frictional melting to be the rule rather than the exception. I would expect to see pseudotachylite in all exposures of exhumed ancient subduction zones, like the Franciscan Complex in California. But instead we find rocks like blueschist and eclogite that can only form at high pressure and low temperature. Subduction zone rocks are known for metamorphic mineral parageneses that indicate a very low geothermal gradient.
--Possibly. I have several resources which discuss in some detail subduction in this context, I might have to have a look.
Baumgardners response to your comments seems a little unclear to me. When he says he thinks it is unlikely that significant [frictional] melting would have occurred, do you think he means unlikely that a significant quantity in comparison with other sources would have occurred, or unlikely that frictional melting would be recognizable in a significant number of exhumed faults?
--I would assume that his assertion that it is unlikely that significant frictional melting would occur, is in relation to that which would be expected by uniformitarian rates of subduction. I'm afraid I can't be very confident that this is the correct context. Baumgardner and I did not discuss or mention what would be expected from current geological observations of exhumed subduction slip boundaries, so I'm not sure that that would be an accurate relation as well.
I realize it is a personal communication but is there a reference for the 2D calculations or is that in the original paper on the ICR site?
--One paper that he sent me several months before publication last year for me to study is:
Baumgardner, John R.,
Catastrophic Plate Tectonics: The physics behind the Genesis Flood, Fifth ICC, 2003
--There was also a TJ forum article in which Baumgardner lightly touched on some of these issues:
Baumgardner, John R., Oard, Michael J.,
Forum on Catastrophic Plate Tectonics,
TJ 16(1), 2002
--I hope these help.
Cheers,
-Chris Grose