Crustal accretion at intermediate spreading rates: Pacific-Antarctic Ridge at 65 degrees south latitude

The objective of this morpho-tectonic study is to understand the processes associated with crustal accretion along two adjacent ridge segments of the Pacific-Antarctic ridge (full rate: $\approx$56 mm/yr). The studied corridor is centered on the Pitman Fracture Zone and extends to 12 Ma on both flan...

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Main Author: Macario, Ana
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: Columbia University 1995
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/35901/
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.43812
id ftawi:oai:epic.awi.de:35901
record_format openpolar
spelling ftawi:oai:epic.awi.de:35901 2024-09-15T17:43:55+00:00 Crustal accretion at intermediate spreading rates: Pacific-Antarctic Ridge at 65 degrees south latitude Macario, Ana 1995 https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/35901/ https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.43812 unknown Columbia University Macario, A. orcid:0000-0003-3747-793X (1995) Crustal accretion at intermediate spreading rates: Pacific-Antarctic Ridge at 65 degrees south latitude , PhD thesis, Columbia University. hdl:10013/epic.43812 EPIC3Columbia University, 209 p. Thesis notRev 1995 ftawi 2024-06-24T04:09:53Z The objective of this morpho-tectonic study is to understand the processes associated with crustal accretion along two adjacent ridge segments of the Pacific-Antarctic ridge (full rate: $\approx$56 mm/yr). The studied corridor is centered on the Pitman Fracture Zone and extends to 12 Ma on both flanks. The segment north of the fracture zone is characterized by a shallower ridge crest, larger off-axis seamount volume and abundance, thicker crust (inferred from mantle Bouguer gravity) and smaller abyssal hill spacing, all indications of a hotter axial thermal regime and/or larger magma supply. The spreading history of this portion of the ridge is marked by a $\sim$40% acceleration in spreading rate and a $\sim$5$\sp\circ$ clockwise rotation in spreading direction near Chron 3A ($\sim$6 Ma). This sharp rotation is superimposed on a gradual rotation of $\sim$1$\sp\circ$/Ma which implies that the transform has been in extension for the past 12 Ma. The remarkable agreement between the azimuths of the digitized ridge-parallel abyssal hill lineations and trends predicted by the finite rotation poles suggests that the zone of accretion is, on average, orthofonal to the spreading direction. A statistical characterization study of abyssal hill size indicates that abyssal hills formed during the slower spreading periods are taller and wider than the hills created during the faster spreading periods. Bathymetric slopes dipping toward the ridge crest are interpreted as fault-controlled due to their more linear and steeper character relative to the ones dipping away from the ridge crest. Spreading rates for conjugate plates show wide flow line variations in both magnitude and sense for adjacent ridge segments, an indication that crustal accretion rates are controlled by processes happening near the ridge crest. The remarkable symmetry between sequences of inward facing fault scarps of the same age on opposite plates requires that abyssal hills are formed as conjugate pairs. Based on abyssal hill lineaments and magnetic anomaly ... Thesis Antarc* Antarctic Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar- and Marine Research (AWI): ePIC (electronic Publication Information Center)
institution Open Polar
collection Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar- and Marine Research (AWI): ePIC (electronic Publication Information Center)
op_collection_id ftawi
language unknown
description The objective of this morpho-tectonic study is to understand the processes associated with crustal accretion along two adjacent ridge segments of the Pacific-Antarctic ridge (full rate: $\approx$56 mm/yr). The studied corridor is centered on the Pitman Fracture Zone and extends to 12 Ma on both flanks. The segment north of the fracture zone is characterized by a shallower ridge crest, larger off-axis seamount volume and abundance, thicker crust (inferred from mantle Bouguer gravity) and smaller abyssal hill spacing, all indications of a hotter axial thermal regime and/or larger magma supply. The spreading history of this portion of the ridge is marked by a $\sim$40% acceleration in spreading rate and a $\sim$5$\sp\circ$ clockwise rotation in spreading direction near Chron 3A ($\sim$6 Ma). This sharp rotation is superimposed on a gradual rotation of $\sim$1$\sp\circ$/Ma which implies that the transform has been in extension for the past 12 Ma. The remarkable agreement between the azimuths of the digitized ridge-parallel abyssal hill lineations and trends predicted by the finite rotation poles suggests that the zone of accretion is, on average, orthofonal to the spreading direction. A statistical characterization study of abyssal hill size indicates that abyssal hills formed during the slower spreading periods are taller and wider than the hills created during the faster spreading periods. Bathymetric slopes dipping toward the ridge crest are interpreted as fault-controlled due to their more linear and steeper character relative to the ones dipping away from the ridge crest. Spreading rates for conjugate plates show wide flow line variations in both magnitude and sense for adjacent ridge segments, an indication that crustal accretion rates are controlled by processes happening near the ridge crest. The remarkable symmetry between sequences of inward facing fault scarps of the same age on opposite plates requires that abyssal hills are formed as conjugate pairs. Based on abyssal hill lineaments and magnetic anomaly ...
format Thesis
author Macario, Ana
spellingShingle Macario, Ana
Crustal accretion at intermediate spreading rates: Pacific-Antarctic Ridge at 65 degrees south latitude
author_facet Macario, Ana
author_sort Macario, Ana
title Crustal accretion at intermediate spreading rates: Pacific-Antarctic Ridge at 65 degrees south latitude
title_short Crustal accretion at intermediate spreading rates: Pacific-Antarctic Ridge at 65 degrees south latitude
title_full Crustal accretion at intermediate spreading rates: Pacific-Antarctic Ridge at 65 degrees south latitude
title_fullStr Crustal accretion at intermediate spreading rates: Pacific-Antarctic Ridge at 65 degrees south latitude
title_full_unstemmed Crustal accretion at intermediate spreading rates: Pacific-Antarctic Ridge at 65 degrees south latitude
title_sort crustal accretion at intermediate spreading rates: pacific-antarctic ridge at 65 degrees south latitude
publisher Columbia University
publishDate 1995
url https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/35901/
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.43812
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
op_source EPIC3Columbia University, 209 p.
op_relation Macario, A. orcid:0000-0003-3747-793X (1995) Crustal accretion at intermediate spreading rates: Pacific-Antarctic Ridge at 65 degrees south latitude , PhD thesis, Columbia University. hdl:10013/epic.43812
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