Record Details

Origin of the Louisville ridge and its relationship to the Eltanin Fracture Zone System

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

Field Value
Title Origin of the Louisville ridge and its relationship to the Eltanin Fracture Zone System
Names Watts, A. B. (creator)
Weissel, J. K. (creator)
Duncan, Robert A. (creator)
Larson, R. L. (creator)
Date Issued 1988 (iso8601)
Note copyrighted by American Geophysical Union
Abstract We have combined shipboard and Seasat altimeter derived data in an intergrated geological and
geophysical study of the Louisville Ridge; a 3500-km-long seamount chain extending from the Tonga
trench to the Eltanin Fracture Zone. A break in the smooth trend of the ridge at latitude 37.5°S has been
recognized in both bathymetric and altimetric data. The ⁴⁰Ar-³⁹Ar dating of rocks dredged either side of
the break suggest that it is analogous to the bend in the Hawaiian-Emperor seamount chain. Although
the general trend of the ridge can be fit by small circles about Pacific absolute motion poles determined
from other seamount chains, the new bathymetric and age data allow us to refine Pacific absolute motion
poles. The continuity in smooth trend of the ridge and the Eltanin Fracture Zone suggests some
relationship between them. However, a major offset developed on this transform between 60 and 80 Ma,
prior to the oldest dated rocks from the ridge. Although magmatism was more or less continuous on the
ridge during 28-60 Ma, it probably occurred on crust with little or no offset. Thus magmatism appears
to have been little influenced by the developing fracture zone. 8y 28 Ma, the distance between the
magmatic source and the fracture zone had decreased sufficiently for a portion of the ridge to have been
emplaced on crust with an offset. After about 12 Ma, however, volcanic activity on the Louisville Ridge
apparently waned, despite a possible influence on the magmatism of the fracture zone.
Genre Article
Identifier Duncan, R. A., Larson, R. L., Watts, A. B., and Weisel, J. K. (1988), Origin of the Louisville Ridge and its relationship to the Elantin Fracture Zone System. J. Geophys, Res., 93, B4, 3051-3077.

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