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Evidence for diffuse exension of the Pacific plate from Pukapuka ridges and cross-grain gravity lineations

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Title Evidence for diffuse exension of the Pacific plate from Pukapuka ridges and cross-grain gravity lineations
Names Sandwell, David T. (creator)
Winterer, Edward L. (creator)
Mammerickx, Jacqueline (creator)
Duncan, Robert A. (creator)
Lynch, Mary Ann (creator)
Levitt, Daniel A. (creator)
Johnson, Catherine L. (creator)
Date Issued 1995-08-10 (iso8601)
Note copyrighted by American Geophysical Union
Abstract Satellite altimeter measurements of marine gravity reveal 100 to 200-km
wavelength lineations over a wide area of the Pacific plate oriented roughly in the direction of
absolute plate motion. At least three mechanisms have been proposed for their origin: smallscale
convective rolls aligned in the direction of absolute plate motion by shear in the
asthenosphere; diffuse N-S extension of the lithosphere resulting in lineated zones of extension
(boudins); and minihotspots that move slowly with respect to major hotspots and produce
intermittent volcanism. Recently, several chains of linear volcanic ridges have been found to be
associated with the gravity lineations. Following ridgelike gravity signatures apparent in high resolution
Geosat gravity measurements, we surveyed a series of volcanic ridges that extend
northwest from the East Pacific Rise flank for 2600 kIn onto 40 Ma seafloor. Our survey data,
as well as radiometric dates on samples we collected from the ridges, provide tight constraints on
their origin: (1) Individual ridge segments and sets of ridges are highly elongate in the direction
of present absolute plate motion. (2) The ridges formed along a band 50 to 70-kIn-wide in the
trough of one of the more prominent gravity lineations. (3) Radiometric dates of the largest
ridges show no hotspot age progression. Moreover, the directions predicted for minihotspot
traces older than 24 Ma do not match observed directions of either the gravity lineations or the
ridges. Based on this last observation, we reject the minihotspot model. The occurrence of the
ridges in the trough of the gravity lineation is incompatible with the small-scale convection
model which would predict increased volcanism above the convective upwelling. We favor the
diffuse extension model because it is consistent with the occurrence of ridges in the trough above
the more highly extended lithosphere. However, the multibeam data show no evidence for
widespread normal faulting of the crust as predicted by the model. Perhaps the fault scarps are
buried under more than 30 m of sediments and/or covered by the elongated ridges. Finally, we
note that if ridge-push force is much smaller than trench-pull force, then near the ridge axis the
direction of maximum tensile stress must be perpendicular to the direction of absolute plate
motion.
Genre Article
Identifier Duncan, R. A., Johnson, C. L., Levitt, D. A., Lynch, M. A., Mammerickx, J., Sandwell, D. T., and Winterer, E. L. (1995), Evidence for diffuse extension of the Pacific plate form Pukapuka ridges and cross-grain gravity lineations. J. Geophys. Res., 100, B8, 15087-15099.

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