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Scratching the surface: estimating dimensions of large igneous provinces

Scratching the surface: estimating dimensions of large igneous provinces
Scratching the surface: estimating dimensions of large igneous provinces
A study of five major basaltic provinces, including oceanic plateaus, volcanic passive margins, and continental flood basalts, shows that they are voluminous constructions of extrusive igneous rock underlain by intrusive rock. Crustal thickness ranges from 20 to 40 km, and lower crust is characterized by high (7.0-7.6 km/s) seismic velocities. Volumes and emplacement rates derived for two oceanic plateaus, the Ontong Java and Kerguelen-Broken Ridge, reveal short-lived pulses of increased global crustal production and suggest an origin involving the lower mantle. The Ontong Java rate of emplacement may have exceeded the contemporaneous global production rate of the entire mid-ocean ridge system. Despite the importance off large igneous provinces in studies of mantle dynamics and the global environment, scarce age and deep crustal data necessitate intensified efforts in seismic imaging and scientific drilling in a range of such features.
0091-7613
515-518
Coffin, M.F.
b8285650-5efd-4129-ae91-1cf3f5911e89
Eldholm, O.
5be5f193-48f6-4842-9b53-9fb4df5b6b07
Coffin, M.F.
b8285650-5efd-4129-ae91-1cf3f5911e89
Eldholm, O.
5be5f193-48f6-4842-9b53-9fb4df5b6b07

Coffin, M.F. and Eldholm, O. (1993) Scratching the surface: estimating dimensions of large igneous provinces. Geology, 21 (6), 515-518. (doi:10.1130/0091-7613(1993)021<0515:STSEDO>2.3.CO;2).

Record type: Article

Abstract

A study of five major basaltic provinces, including oceanic plateaus, volcanic passive margins, and continental flood basalts, shows that they are voluminous constructions of extrusive igneous rock underlain by intrusive rock. Crustal thickness ranges from 20 to 40 km, and lower crust is characterized by high (7.0-7.6 km/s) seismic velocities. Volumes and emplacement rates derived for two oceanic plateaus, the Ontong Java and Kerguelen-Broken Ridge, reveal short-lived pulses of increased global crustal production and suggest an origin involving the lower mantle. The Ontong Java rate of emplacement may have exceeded the contemporaneous global production rate of the entire mid-ocean ridge system. Despite the importance off large igneous provinces in studies of mantle dynamics and the global environment, scarce age and deep crustal data necessitate intensified efforts in seismic imaging and scientific drilling in a range of such features.

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Published date: June 1993

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 52416
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/52416
ISSN: 0091-7613
PURE UUID: 19b713c5-3b22-492a-ae0e-aace6aaed2a4

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Date deposited: 26 Jun 2008
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 10:36

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Contributors

Author: M.F. Coffin
Author: O. Eldholm

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