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A 3-D seismic tomographic study of spreading structures and smooth seafloor generated by detachment faulting – the ultra-slow spreading Southwest Indian Ridge at 64˚30’E

A 3-D seismic tomographic study of spreading structures and smooth seafloor generated by detachment faulting – the ultra-slow spreading Southwest Indian Ridge at 64˚30’E
A 3-D seismic tomographic study of spreading structures and smooth seafloor generated by detachment faulting – the ultra-slow spreading Southwest Indian Ridge at 64˚30’E
At ultra-slow spreading ridges, with full spreading rates less than ∼20 mm/yr, spreading is accommodated both by highly spatially and temporally segmented magmatism, and tectonic extension along large-scale detachment faults that exhume ultramafic material to the seafloor. In the most magma-poor regions, detachment faulting alternates in polarity over time, producing a “flip-flopping” effect of subsequent detachment dips. The resulting seafloor in these regions displays a morphology termed “smooth seafloor” comprising elongate, broad ridges with peridotite/serpentinite lithologies. We conducted tomographic travel-time inversion of a 3-D wide-angle seismic data set acquired over a region of smooth seafloor around 64°30′E along the Southwest Indian Ridge (SISMOSMOOTH; Cruise MD199), to produce a seismic velocity volume through the crustal section and into the uppermost mantle. We observe patterns of velocity anomalies that correspond with variations in the bathymetry arising from the mode of spreading and are interpreted as changes in the degree of alteration with depth resulting from spatial and temporal variations in fluid-rock interaction, controlled by faulting and tectonic damage processes. The detachment faults do not show simple planar structures at depth but instead mirror the shapes of the bathymetric ridges that they exhume. Magmatic input is overall highly limited, but there is one region on the lower part of an exhumed detachment footwall where a thickness of volcanic material is observed that suggests a component of syn-tectonic volcanism, which could contribute to detachment abandonment.
2169-9356
Robinson, Adam H.
f5aea908-d884-465b-bfc1-ed67ca16ed85
Watremez, Louise
90127cfb-daae-4627-af61-42affed039d7
Leroy, Sylvie
d1156162-4c90-43ac-a558-49f14490c45f
Minshull, Timothy A.
bf413fb5-849e-4389-acd7-0cb0d644e6b8
Cannat, Mathilde
a914c307-0536-4f0b-925c-97acae2a93e5
Corbalán, Ana
e7fa7116-f0e6-45cb-8393-8a1d385795d2
Robinson, Adam H.
f5aea908-d884-465b-bfc1-ed67ca16ed85
Watremez, Louise
90127cfb-daae-4627-af61-42affed039d7
Leroy, Sylvie
d1156162-4c90-43ac-a558-49f14490c45f
Minshull, Timothy A.
bf413fb5-849e-4389-acd7-0cb0d644e6b8
Cannat, Mathilde
a914c307-0536-4f0b-925c-97acae2a93e5
Corbalán, Ana
e7fa7116-f0e6-45cb-8393-8a1d385795d2

Robinson, Adam H., Watremez, Louise, Leroy, Sylvie, Minshull, Timothy A., Cannat, Mathilde and Corbalán, Ana (2024) A 3-D seismic tomographic study of spreading structures and smooth seafloor generated by detachment faulting – the ultra-slow spreading Southwest Indian Ridge at 64˚30’E. Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 129 (9), [e2024JB029253]. (doi:10.1029/2024JB029253).

Record type: Article

Abstract

At ultra-slow spreading ridges, with full spreading rates less than ∼20 mm/yr, spreading is accommodated both by highly spatially and temporally segmented magmatism, and tectonic extension along large-scale detachment faults that exhume ultramafic material to the seafloor. In the most magma-poor regions, detachment faulting alternates in polarity over time, producing a “flip-flopping” effect of subsequent detachment dips. The resulting seafloor in these regions displays a morphology termed “smooth seafloor” comprising elongate, broad ridges with peridotite/serpentinite lithologies. We conducted tomographic travel-time inversion of a 3-D wide-angle seismic data set acquired over a region of smooth seafloor around 64°30′E along the Southwest Indian Ridge (SISMOSMOOTH; Cruise MD199), to produce a seismic velocity volume through the crustal section and into the uppermost mantle. We observe patterns of velocity anomalies that correspond with variations in the bathymetry arising from the mode of spreading and are interpreted as changes in the degree of alteration with depth resulting from spatial and temporal variations in fluid-rock interaction, controlled by faulting and tectonic damage processes. The detachment faults do not show simple planar structures at depth but instead mirror the shapes of the bathymetric ridges that they exhume. Magmatic input is overall highly limited, but there is one region on the lower part of an exhumed detachment footwall where a thickness of volcanic material is observed that suggests a component of syn-tectonic volcanism, which could contribute to detachment abandonment.

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More information

Submitted date: 27 March 2024
Accepted/In Press date: 20 August 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 5 September 2024
Published date: 5 September 2024

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 493123
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493123
ISSN: 2169-9356
PURE UUID: 5b5a854d-0d33-48c1-8ec2-eb3fafc57d1e
ORCID for Adam H. Robinson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3447-870X
ORCID for Timothy A. Minshull: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8202-1379

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Date deposited: 23 Aug 2024 16:42
Last modified: 06 Sep 2024 01:58

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Contributors

Author: Louise Watremez
Author: Sylvie Leroy
Author: Mathilde Cannat
Author: Ana Corbalán

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