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Revealing of continental crust formation mechanism is a fundamental problem. There are metamorphic based theories and leading magmatic ones. Most recent models rely on differentiation of basaltic magma generated by partial melting of peridotite under influence of a fluid escape from subducting hydrated oceanic crust. Here we present hypothesis of alternative mechanism of continental crust formation which invokes the multicomponent pore fluid transport by reactive porosity waves through the base of the Lithosphere. It includes partial hydration of mantle peridotite due to interaction with aqueous solutions transported through fluid-rich channels-like structures in rocks undergoing visco-elastic deformation coupled with reactions, phase transformations, volume and density changes. To support the hypothesis, we propose a coupled hydro-mechanical-chemical model for simulating the filtration of multicomponent fluid through deforming mineral matrix treating zero porosity limit. Along with a number of constitutive relations, this model is closed by tabulated thermodynamic data, which are to be preliminarily calculated using linprog minimization in ThermoLab. We present 2D numerical implementation utilizing accelerated pseudo-transient numerical scheme. Results illustrate hydration porosity wave propagation witj peridotite alteration and the visco-elastic deformation of the zero porosity mineral matrix, with reference to the system up to 12 components including the corresponding solid and aqueous solutions.
Khakimova et al. (Sat,) studied this question.