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Influence of enhanced melt supply on upper crustal structure at a mid-ocean ridge discontinuity: A three-dimensional seismic tomographic study of 9N East Pacific Rise

Influence of enhanced melt supply on upper crustal structure at a mid-ocean ridge discontinuity: A three-dimensional seismic tomographic study of 9N East Pacific Rise
Influence of enhanced melt supply on upper crustal structure at a mid-ocean ridge discontinuity: A three-dimensional seismic tomographic study of 9N East Pacific Rise
We present a three-dimensional upper crustal model of the 9degrees03'N overlapping spreading center (OSC) on the East Pacific Rise that assists in understanding the relationship between melt sills and upper crustal structure at a ridge discontinuity with enhanced melt supply at crustal levels. Our P wave velocity model obtained from tomographic inversion of similar to 70,000 crustal first arrival travel times suggests that the geometry of extrusive emplacement are significantly different beneath the overlapping spreading limbs. Extrusive volcanic rocks above the western melt sill are inferred to be thin ( similar to 250 m). More extensive accumulation of extrusives is inferred to the west than to the east of the western melt sill. The extrusive layer inferred above the eastern melt sill thickens from similar to 350 ( at the neovolcanic axis) to 550 m ( to the west of the melt sill). Volcanic construction is likely to be significant in the formation of ridge crest morphology at the OSC, particularly at the tip of the eastern limb. On the basis of our interpretation of the velocity model, we propose that enhanced magma supply at crustal levels at the OSC may provide an effective mechanism for the migration of ridge discontinuities. This "dynamic magma supply model'' may explain the commonly observed nonsteady migration pattern of ridge discontinuities by attributing this to the temporal fluctuations in melt availability to the overlapping spreading limbs
overlapping spreading center, magma supply, ridge segmentation, ridge propagation, crustal evolution, oceanic crust.
0148-0227
art. 2464
Tong, C.H.
8ef72d4a-5121-4287-aa5d-3e95b68fdf8b
Barton, P.J.
d823de17-bb61-4e0d-8dcc-871aa490a504
White, R.S.
3919ea9f-a09d-43c2-93fa-c7986055e486
Sinha, M.C.
794c3012-d0e8-4d2f-b328-c8cfd56c5976
Singh, S.C.
b23f1231-1b5d-4843-8b12-0d32fc7bc2c1
Pye, J.W.
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Hobbs, R.W.
a9a99163-c8a3-4d29-b673-61260be15157
Bazin, S.
150a6d8c-8823-46ec-a147-a34fb46c4759
Harding, A.J.
68c8db79-a7b3-4f90-ab0b-7ab9b7eee619
Kent, G.M.
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Orcutt, J.A.
66df5264-9e8e-424a-9bb7-2b20347cb369
Tong, C.H.
8ef72d4a-5121-4287-aa5d-3e95b68fdf8b
Barton, P.J.
d823de17-bb61-4e0d-8dcc-871aa490a504
White, R.S.
3919ea9f-a09d-43c2-93fa-c7986055e486
Sinha, M.C.
794c3012-d0e8-4d2f-b328-c8cfd56c5976
Singh, S.C.
b23f1231-1b5d-4843-8b12-0d32fc7bc2c1
Pye, J.W.
7c892044-0268-44dd-a398-907c32fa9362
Hobbs, R.W.
a9a99163-c8a3-4d29-b673-61260be15157
Bazin, S.
150a6d8c-8823-46ec-a147-a34fb46c4759
Harding, A.J.
68c8db79-a7b3-4f90-ab0b-7ab9b7eee619
Kent, G.M.
a5c64464-6e7a-4b17-9ebb-2a8e7a1891c7
Orcutt, J.A.
66df5264-9e8e-424a-9bb7-2b20347cb369

Tong, C.H., Barton, P.J., White, R.S., Sinha, M.C., Singh, S.C., Pye, J.W., Hobbs, R.W., Bazin, S., Harding, A.J., Kent, G.M. and Orcutt, J.A. (2003) Influence of enhanced melt supply on upper crustal structure at a mid-ocean ridge discontinuity: A three-dimensional seismic tomographic study of 9N East Pacific Rise. Journal of Geophysical Research, 108 (B10), art. 2464. (doi:10.1029/2002JB002163).

Record type: Article

Abstract

We present a three-dimensional upper crustal model of the 9degrees03'N overlapping spreading center (OSC) on the East Pacific Rise that assists in understanding the relationship between melt sills and upper crustal structure at a ridge discontinuity with enhanced melt supply at crustal levels. Our P wave velocity model obtained from tomographic inversion of similar to 70,000 crustal first arrival travel times suggests that the geometry of extrusive emplacement are significantly different beneath the overlapping spreading limbs. Extrusive volcanic rocks above the western melt sill are inferred to be thin ( similar to 250 m). More extensive accumulation of extrusives is inferred to the west than to the east of the western melt sill. The extrusive layer inferred above the eastern melt sill thickens from similar to 350 ( at the neovolcanic axis) to 550 m ( to the west of the melt sill). Volcanic construction is likely to be significant in the formation of ridge crest morphology at the OSC, particularly at the tip of the eastern limb. On the basis of our interpretation of the velocity model, we propose that enhanced magma supply at crustal levels at the OSC may provide an effective mechanism for the migration of ridge discontinuities. This "dynamic magma supply model'' may explain the commonly observed nonsteady migration pattern of ridge discontinuities by attributing this to the temporal fluctuations in melt availability to the overlapping spreading limbs

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Published date: 2003
Keywords: overlapping spreading center, magma supply, ridge segmentation, ridge propagation, crustal evolution, oceanic crust.

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Local EPrints ID: 1305
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/1305
ISSN: 0148-0227
PURE UUID: 2b13e4f2-4701-4af0-87d3-d0e308464277

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Date deposited: 16 Apr 2004
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 04:43

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Contributors

Author: C.H. Tong
Author: P.J. Barton
Author: R.S. White
Author: M.C. Sinha
Author: S.C. Singh
Author: J.W. Pye
Author: R.W. Hobbs
Author: S. Bazin
Author: A.J. Harding
Author: G.M. Kent
Author: J.A. Orcutt

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