Author | dc.contributor.author | Contreras Reyes, Eduardo | |
Author | dc.contributor.author | Grevemeyer, I. | es_CL |
Author | dc.contributor.author | Watts, A. B. | es_CL |
Author | dc.contributor.author | Planert, L. | es_CL |
Author | dc.contributor.author | Flueh, E. R. | es_CL |
Author | dc.contributor.author | Peirce, C. | es_CL |
Admission date | dc.date.accessioned | 2010-07-13T20:07:35Z | |
Available date | dc.date.available | 2010-07-13T20:07:35Z | |
Publication date | dc.date.issued | 2010 | |
Cita de ítem | dc.identifier.citation | Earth and Planetary Science Letters 289 (2010) 323–333 | en_US |
Identifier | dc.identifier.other | doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2009.11.020 | |
Identifier | dc.identifier.uri | https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/125406 | |
Abstract | dc.description.abstract | We report here the first detailed 2D tomographic image of the crust and upper mantle structure of a
Cretaceous seamount that formed during the interaction of the Pacific plate and the Louisville hotspot.
Results show that at ∼1.5 km beneath the seamount summit, the core of the volcanic edifice appears to be
dominantly intrusive, with velocities faster than 6.5 km/s. The edifice overlies both high lower crustal (N7.2–
7.6 km/s) and upper mantle (N8.3 km/s) velocities, suggesting that ultramafic rocks have been intruded as
sills rather than underplated beneath the crust. The results suggest that the ratio between the volume of
intra-crustal magmatic intrusion and extrusive volcanism is as high as ∼4.5. In addition, the inversion of
Moho reflections shows that the Pacific oceanic crust has been flexed downward by up to ∼2.5 km beneath
the seamount. The flexure can be explained by an elastic plate model in which the seamount emplaced upon
oceanic lithosphere that was ∼10 Myr at the time of loading. Intra-crustal magmatic intrusion may be a
feature of hotspot volcanism at young, hot, oceanic lithosphere, whereas, magmatic underplating below a
pre-existing Moho may be more likely to occur where a hotspot interacts with oceanic lithosphere that is
several tens of millions of years old. | en_US |
Patrocinador | dc.description.sponsorship | This work was supported by the German
Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF), grant 03G0195A and UK
Natural Environmental Research Council (NERC) grant NE/F005318/1. | en_US |
Lenguage | dc.language.iso | en | en_US |
Publisher | dc.publisher | ELSEVIER | en_US |
Keywords | dc.subject | hotspots | en_US |
Título | dc.title | Crustal intrusion beneath the Louisville hotspot track | en_US |
Document type | dc.type | Artículo de revista | |