THE process by which basaltic melt is generated and extracted beneath
mid-ocean ridges is poorly understood. Knowledge of the distribution o
f melt within the parent mantle peridotite during the early stages of
melting is important for interpretation of geophysical experiments and
for construction of models of magma coalescence and extraction(1-4).
Static experiments on mantle rocks and selected analogue materials hav
e shown that, for small melt fractions, melt is concentrated along thr
ee-grain intersections, forming an interconnected web of tubes(5-9). L
ow-pressure deformation experiments on olivine + melt specimens have y
ielded the same conclusion(10,11). But in similar experiments on salt-
brine mixtures during ductile deformation, the fluid emerges from the
triple junctions where it resides under static conditions and spreads
onto grain boundaries(12-16). Here we report the results of low-stress
deformation experiments on partially molten peridotite at mantle temp
eratures and pressures, which show that such dynamic melting produces
microstructures analogous to those of the salt-brine experiments. The
very low viscosity of these specimens suggests that in the Earth, dyna
mic wetting could lead to melt separation at very low melt fractions,
and to melt focusing at ridges.