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Distribution of recent volcanism and the morphology of seamounts and ridges in the GLIMPSE study area: implications for the lithospheric cracking hypothesis for the origin of intraplate, non-hotspot volcanic chains

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Title Distribution of recent volcanism and the morphology of seamounts and ridges in the GLIMPSE study area: implications for the lithospheric cracking hypothesis for the origin of intraplate, non-hotspot volcanic chains
Names Forsyth, Donald W. (creator)
Harmon, Nicholas (creator)
Scheirer, Daniel S. (creator)
Duncan, Robert A. (creator)
Date Issued 2006-11-25 (iso8601)
Note copyrighted by American Geophysical Union
Abstract Lithospheric cracking by remotely applied stresses or thermoelastic stresses has been
suggested to be the mechanism responsible for the formation of intraplate volcanic ridges
in the Pacific that clearly do not form above fixed hot spots. As part of the Gravity
Lineations Intraplate Melting Petrology and Seismic Expedition (GLIMPSE) project
designed to investigate the origin of these features, we have mapped two volcanic chains
that are actively forming to the west of the East Pacific Rise using multibeam echo
sounding and side-scan sonar. Side-scan sonar reveals the distribution of rough seafloor
corresponding to recent, unsedimented lava flows. In the Hotu Matua volcanic complex,
recent flows and volcanic edifices are distributed over a region 450 km long and up to
65 km wide, with an apparent, irregular age progression from older flows in the west to
younger in the east. The 550-km-long Southern Cross Seamount/Sojourn Ridge/Brown
Ridge chain appears to have been recently active only at its eastern end near the East
Pacific Rise. A third region of recent flows is found 120 km north of Southern Cross
Seamount in seafloor approximately 9 Myr old. No indication of lithospheric extension in
the form of faulting or graben formation paralleling the trend of the volcanic chains is
found in the vicinity of recent flows or anywhere else in the study area. Thermoelastic
cracking could be a factor in the formation of a few small, very narrow volcanic ridges,
but most of the volcanic activity is broadly distributed in wide swaths with no indication
of formation along narrow cracks. The Sojourn and Brown chains appear to begin as
distributed zones of small seamounts that later develop into segmented ridges, perhaps
under the influence of membrane stresses from self-loading. We suggest that the linear
volcanic chains are created by moving melting anomalies in the asthenosphere and that
lithospheric cracking plays at most a secondary role.
Genre Article
Topic GLIMPSE study area
Identifier Forsyth, D. W., N. Harmon, D. S. Scheirer, and R. A. Duncan (2006), Distribution of recent volcanism and the morphology of seamounts and ridges in the GLIMPSE study area: Implications for the lithospheric cracking hypothesis for the origin of intraplate, non – hot spot volcanic chains, J. Geophys. Res., 111, B11407, doi:10.1029/2005JB004075.

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