Artigo Revisado por pares

Mid-Atlantic Ridge–Azores hotspot interactions: along-axis migration of a hotspot-derived event of enhanced magmatism 10 to 4 Ma ago

1999; Elsevier BV; Volume: 173; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/s0012-821x(99)00234-4

ISSN

1385-013X

Autores

Mathilde Cannat, A. Briais, Christine Deplus, J. Escartı́n, J. E. Georgen, Jian Lin, Serguei Mercouriev, Christine Meyzen, Mark Müller, Gaud Pouliquen, Aline Rabain, Pedro Silva,

Tópico(s)

High-pressure geophysics and materials

Resumo

A recent survey of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge over the southern edge of the Azores Platform shows that two anomalously shallow regions located off-axis on both sides of the ridge are the two flanks of a single rifted volcanic plateau. Crustal thickness over this plateau is up to twice that of surrounding oceanic areas, and original axial depths were near sealevel. The lack of a coherent magnetic anomaly pattern, and the near absence of fault scarps over the plateau suggest that its formation involved outpouring of lava over large distances off-axis. This volcanic plateau formed in Miocene times during an episode of greatly enhanced ridge magmatism caused, as proposed by P.R. Vogt [Geology 7 (1979) 93–98], by the southward propagation of a melting anomaly originated within the Azores hotspot. This melting anomaly could reflect excess temperatures of ∼70°C in the mantle beneath the ridge. It propagated at rates of ∼60 mm/yr and lasted no more than a few million years at any given location along the ridge. Enhanced magmatism due to this melting anomaly played a significant role, some 10 Ma ago, in the construction of the Azores Platform.

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