Isostasy and Crustal Structure
Mountains and ocean basins are largely supported by buoyancy: the crust floats on the denser mantle so that loads are compensated at depth, a balance called isostasy that shapes the gravity field and constrains crustal structure.
Definition
Isostasy is the condition of buoyant equilibrium in which topographic loads on the Earth are compensated by mass deficits or by lithospheric flexure at depth, so that pressure becomes nearly uniform below a depth of compensation; crustal structure refers to the thickness and density layering of the crust this balance reflects.
Scope
This topic covers the principle of isostasy and its implications for the structure of the crust and lithosphere: the Airy model with deep crustal roots beneath mountains, the Pratt model with lateral density variation, and the more realistic flexural model in which a rigid lithosphere bends under loads. It treats isostatic gravity anomalies as indicators of departures from compensation, the relation between topography, crustal thickness, and the Moho, and the rheological strength of the lithosphere. The emphasis is on how mass loads are supported and how this is read in gravity and crustal structure.
Core questions
- How are mountains and basins supported against the pull of gravity?
- How do the Airy, Pratt, and flexural models of compensation differ?
- What do isostatic gravity anomalies reveal about departures from equilibrium?
- How does crustal thickness relate to topography and the depth of the Moho?
Key concepts
- Isostatic equilibrium and depth of compensation
- Airy model and crustal roots
- Pratt model and lateral density variation
- Flexural (regional) compensation of the lithosphere
- Isostatic gravity anomalies and crustal thickness
Key theories
- Airy and Pratt local compensation
- In the Airy model topography is buoyed by deep low-density crustal roots, while in the Pratt model columns of differing density rise to differing heights above a common compensation depth; both explain why large mountains do not produce the full gravity excess expected from their mass.
- Flexural isostasy
- Because the lithosphere has finite strength, loads are supported not only locally but by regional bending of an elastic plate, so the wavelength of compensation and the flexural rigidity of the lithosphere determine how topography is held up.
Mechanisms
The relatively light crust floats on the denser, ductile upper mantle; a topographic load such as a mountain range is balanced either by a local root or density change beneath it or by the elastic flexure of the lithospheric plate spreading the load over a broad region, with the chosen mode set by the lithosphere's strength and the load's size, and any imbalance appears as an isostatic gravity anomaly.
Clinical relevance
Isostasy explains long-term vertical motions such as post-glacial rebound, constrains crustal thickness and lithospheric strength in tectonic studies, and is essential for interpreting gravity surveys over mountains, basins, and continental margins in resource and engineering contexts.
History
Airy and Pratt proposed competing compensation models in the 1850s to explain the deflection of the vertical near the Himalaya; twentieth-century gravity and seismic data confirmed crustal roots, and Watts and others developed the flexural framework that unified local and regional compensation.
Key figures
- George Biddell Airy
- John Henry Pratt
- Anthony Watts
Related topics
Seminal works
- turcotte2014
- fowler2005
- watts2001
Frequently asked questions
- Why don't tall mountains create as much extra gravity as their mass suggests?
- Mountains are typically supported by low-density crustal roots extending into the denser mantle; the mass deficit of the root largely cancels the extra mass of the peak, so the net gravity excess is much smaller than the visible topography alone would imply.
- What is the difference between local and flexural isostasy?
- Local isostasy assumes each column is independently balanced right beneath the load, whereas flexural isostasy recognizes that the lithosphere has strength and bends like a stiff plate, spreading the support of a load across a wider region.