Anomalous heat flow in the northwest Atlantic: A case for continued hydrothermal circulation in 80-M.Y. crust

A detailed study of a 60×150 km area at 60°W, 24°N at the eastern end of the Nares Abyssal Plain indicates that hydrothermal circulation is still active in the 80 m.y. B.P. oceanic crust. The 58 heat flow measurements made at five stations in the area have revealed (1) constant heat flow over the ab...

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Main Authors: Embley, Robert W., Hobart, Michael A., Anderson, Roger N., Abbott, Dallas Helen
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Columbia University 1983
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.7916/d8pr7vrp
https://academiccommons.columbia.edu/doi/10.7916/D8PR7VRP
id ftdatacite:10.7916/d8pr7vrp
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spelling ftdatacite:10.7916/d8pr7vrp 2023-05-15T17:45:47+02:00 Anomalous heat flow in the northwest Atlantic: A case for continued hydrothermal circulation in 80-M.Y. crust Embley, Robert W. Hobart, Michael A. Anderson, Roger N. Abbott, Dallas Helen 1983 https://dx.doi.org/10.7916/d8pr7vrp https://academiccommons.columbia.edu/doi/10.7916/D8PR7VRP unknown Columbia University https://dx.doi.org/10.1029/jb088ib02p01067 Ocean bottom Hydrothermal circulation Oceanography Submarine geology Geophysics Oceanography Text Articles article-journal ScholarlyArticle 1983 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.7916/d8pr7vrp https://doi.org/10.1029/jb088ib02p01067 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z A detailed study of a 60×150 km area at 60°W, 24°N at the eastern end of the Nares Abyssal Plain indicates that hydrothermal circulation is still active in the 80 m.y. B.P. oceanic crust. The 58 heat flow measurements made at five stations in the area have revealed (1) constant heat flow over the abyssal plain (56 mW m−2), (2) a cyclic heat flow over the abyssal hills (mean of 77 mW m−2), and (3) a large anomaly of 710 m W m−2 over one of several small domes which protrude from the abyssal plain. The domes are 0.5–1.0 km in diameter near the top and rise 50 m above the level of the abyssal plain. They are recognized from surface echo sounders by an abrupt disappearance in the abyssal plain subbottom reflectors, but on near-bottom pinger records they appear as steep-walled structures which are covered by ∼10 m of sediment (compared to ∼75 m on the surrounding abyssal hills). From analogy with active ridge crests, these features are probably small volcanoes. The heat flow anomaly over one of the domes is matched well by a finite element convection model with the following characteristics: (1) recharge at one basement outcrop and discharge at another, (2) 300 m of sediment fill between outcrops, and (3) permeabilities of 10−10 cm2 for basalt and 10−13 cm2 for sediment. In other words, we believe that there is very effective convective heat transfer within the crust and out of the relatively permeable, thinly sedimented basement dome, resulting in the local high heat flow. Overall, the results from the Nares survey vividly show the age independent muting effect of sediment on the surface manifestation of crustal convection. In our survey area the mode of heat transfer varies from purely conductive in the more thickly sedimented abyssal plain areas (∼300 m sediment cover) to moderate amplitude convection pattern beneath the abyssal hills (∼75 m sediment cover) to a very large thermal anomaly over the small dome or ‘chimneylike’ structure (∼10 m sediment cover). The domes are possibly active analogues to the presently inactive basement chimney drilled at DSDP site 417A. Text Northwest Atlantic DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Nares ENVELOPE(158.167,158.167,-81.450,-81.450)
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Ocean bottom
Hydrothermal circulation Oceanography
Submarine geology
Geophysics
Oceanography
spellingShingle Ocean bottom
Hydrothermal circulation Oceanography
Submarine geology
Geophysics
Oceanography
Embley, Robert W.
Hobart, Michael A.
Anderson, Roger N.
Abbott, Dallas Helen
Anomalous heat flow in the northwest Atlantic: A case for continued hydrothermal circulation in 80-M.Y. crust
topic_facet Ocean bottom
Hydrothermal circulation Oceanography
Submarine geology
Geophysics
Oceanography
description A detailed study of a 60×150 km area at 60°W, 24°N at the eastern end of the Nares Abyssal Plain indicates that hydrothermal circulation is still active in the 80 m.y. B.P. oceanic crust. The 58 heat flow measurements made at five stations in the area have revealed (1) constant heat flow over the abyssal plain (56 mW m−2), (2) a cyclic heat flow over the abyssal hills (mean of 77 mW m−2), and (3) a large anomaly of 710 m W m−2 over one of several small domes which protrude from the abyssal plain. The domes are 0.5–1.0 km in diameter near the top and rise 50 m above the level of the abyssal plain. They are recognized from surface echo sounders by an abrupt disappearance in the abyssal plain subbottom reflectors, but on near-bottom pinger records they appear as steep-walled structures which are covered by ∼10 m of sediment (compared to ∼75 m on the surrounding abyssal hills). From analogy with active ridge crests, these features are probably small volcanoes. The heat flow anomaly over one of the domes is matched well by a finite element convection model with the following characteristics: (1) recharge at one basement outcrop and discharge at another, (2) 300 m of sediment fill between outcrops, and (3) permeabilities of 10−10 cm2 for basalt and 10−13 cm2 for sediment. In other words, we believe that there is very effective convective heat transfer within the crust and out of the relatively permeable, thinly sedimented basement dome, resulting in the local high heat flow. Overall, the results from the Nares survey vividly show the age independent muting effect of sediment on the surface manifestation of crustal convection. In our survey area the mode of heat transfer varies from purely conductive in the more thickly sedimented abyssal plain areas (∼300 m sediment cover) to moderate amplitude convection pattern beneath the abyssal hills (∼75 m sediment cover) to a very large thermal anomaly over the small dome or ‘chimneylike’ structure (∼10 m sediment cover). The domes are possibly active analogues to the presently inactive basement chimney drilled at DSDP site 417A.
format Text
author Embley, Robert W.
Hobart, Michael A.
Anderson, Roger N.
Abbott, Dallas Helen
author_facet Embley, Robert W.
Hobart, Michael A.
Anderson, Roger N.
Abbott, Dallas Helen
author_sort Embley, Robert W.
title Anomalous heat flow in the northwest Atlantic: A case for continued hydrothermal circulation in 80-M.Y. crust
title_short Anomalous heat flow in the northwest Atlantic: A case for continued hydrothermal circulation in 80-M.Y. crust
title_full Anomalous heat flow in the northwest Atlantic: A case for continued hydrothermal circulation in 80-M.Y. crust
title_fullStr Anomalous heat flow in the northwest Atlantic: A case for continued hydrothermal circulation in 80-M.Y. crust
title_full_unstemmed Anomalous heat flow in the northwest Atlantic: A case for continued hydrothermal circulation in 80-M.Y. crust
title_sort anomalous heat flow in the northwest atlantic: a case for continued hydrothermal circulation in 80-m.y. crust
publisher Columbia University
publishDate 1983
url https://dx.doi.org/10.7916/d8pr7vrp
https://academiccommons.columbia.edu/doi/10.7916/D8PR7VRP
long_lat ENVELOPE(158.167,158.167,-81.450,-81.450)
geographic Nares
geographic_facet Nares
genre Northwest Atlantic
genre_facet Northwest Atlantic
op_relation https://dx.doi.org/10.1029/jb088ib02p01067
op_doi https://doi.org/10.7916/d8pr7vrp
https://doi.org/10.1029/jb088ib02p01067
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