A comparison of mechanical thickness estimates from trough and seamount loading in the southeastern Gulf of Alaska

The southern portion of the Kodiak-Bowie seamonnt chain in the southeastern Gulf of Alaska presents a unique opportunity to investigate loading on young oceanic lithosphere. Oceanic lithosphere younger than 25 Ma is loaded both by sediments in a deep offshore trough and by seamount 100-200 km offsho...

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Main Authors: Harris, Robert N., Chapman, David S.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
unknown
Published: American Geophysical Union
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/8s45qb514
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spelling ftoregonstate:ir.library.oregonstate.edu:8s45qb514 2024-04-14T08:14:27+00:00 A comparison of mechanical thickness estimates from trough and seamount loading in the southeastern Gulf of Alaska Harris, Robert N. Chapman, David S. https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/8s45qb514 English [eng] eng unknown American Geophysical Union https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/8s45qb514 Copyright Not Evaluated Article ftoregonstate 2024-03-21T15:42:27Z The southern portion of the Kodiak-Bowie seamonnt chain in the southeastern Gulf of Alaska presents a unique opportunity to investigate loading on young oceanic lithosphere. Oceanic lithosphere younger than 25 Ma is loaded both by sediments in a deep offshore trough and by seamount 100-200 km offshore. Free-air gravity anomaly values associated with the trough range from -90 mGal over the trough to +25 mGal over the offshore flexural high, whereas values associated with the volcanic loading range from +80 mGal over the seamounts to -10 mGal over their associated moats. These anomalies are modeled first using elastic beam theory. Gravity anomalies associated with the trough are modeled in terms of elastic bending of a sediment filled trench. Elastic thicknesses associated with the trough range from 12 to 22 km with an estimated uncertainty of ± 5 km. Seamounts are approximated as a series of stacked finite cylinders. Gravity highs over the seamounts are used to model density, while gravity patterns associated with the moat and peripheral bulge are used to model the elastic thickness along the seamount chain. Elastic thicknesses along the seamount chain range from 2 to 5 km (estimated uncertainty range 0 to 7 and 0 to 10 km, respectively). To investigate differences in elastic thickness estimates between the trough and seamount models, we incorporate the effects of finite yield strength. Curvatures implied by the elastic beam models are used to calculate mechanical bending stresses. Bending moments calculated from elastic beam models and yield envelope models agree for flexure models at the Queen Charlotte Trough and most seamounts. The mechanical thickness corresponds to the depth to the 700°C isotherm assuming a dry olivine rheology and a simple cooling model for oceanic lithosphere. Our results imply that the strength of the lithosphere calculated for both seamount and trench loading corresponds to the same isotherm. Copyrighted by American Geophysical Union. Article in Journal/Newspaper Kodiak Alaska ScholarsArchive@OSU (Oregon State University) Gulf of Alaska Queen Charlotte ENVELOPE(-132.088,-132.088,53.255,53.255) Queen Charlotte Trough ENVELOPE(-133.500,-133.500,53.000,53.000)
institution Open Polar
collection ScholarsArchive@OSU (Oregon State University)
op_collection_id ftoregonstate
language English
unknown
description The southern portion of the Kodiak-Bowie seamonnt chain in the southeastern Gulf of Alaska presents a unique opportunity to investigate loading on young oceanic lithosphere. Oceanic lithosphere younger than 25 Ma is loaded both by sediments in a deep offshore trough and by seamount 100-200 km offshore. Free-air gravity anomaly values associated with the trough range from -90 mGal over the trough to +25 mGal over the offshore flexural high, whereas values associated with the volcanic loading range from +80 mGal over the seamounts to -10 mGal over their associated moats. These anomalies are modeled first using elastic beam theory. Gravity anomalies associated with the trough are modeled in terms of elastic bending of a sediment filled trench. Elastic thicknesses associated with the trough range from 12 to 22 km with an estimated uncertainty of ± 5 km. Seamounts are approximated as a series of stacked finite cylinders. Gravity highs over the seamounts are used to model density, while gravity patterns associated with the moat and peripheral bulge are used to model the elastic thickness along the seamount chain. Elastic thicknesses along the seamount chain range from 2 to 5 km (estimated uncertainty range 0 to 7 and 0 to 10 km, respectively). To investigate differences in elastic thickness estimates between the trough and seamount models, we incorporate the effects of finite yield strength. Curvatures implied by the elastic beam models are used to calculate mechanical bending stresses. Bending moments calculated from elastic beam models and yield envelope models agree for flexure models at the Queen Charlotte Trough and most seamounts. The mechanical thickness corresponds to the depth to the 700°C isotherm assuming a dry olivine rheology and a simple cooling model for oceanic lithosphere. Our results imply that the strength of the lithosphere calculated for both seamount and trench loading corresponds to the same isotherm. Copyrighted by American Geophysical Union.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Harris, Robert N.
Chapman, David S.
spellingShingle Harris, Robert N.
Chapman, David S.
A comparison of mechanical thickness estimates from trough and seamount loading in the southeastern Gulf of Alaska
author_facet Harris, Robert N.
Chapman, David S.
author_sort Harris, Robert N.
title A comparison of mechanical thickness estimates from trough and seamount loading in the southeastern Gulf of Alaska
title_short A comparison of mechanical thickness estimates from trough and seamount loading in the southeastern Gulf of Alaska
title_full A comparison of mechanical thickness estimates from trough and seamount loading in the southeastern Gulf of Alaska
title_fullStr A comparison of mechanical thickness estimates from trough and seamount loading in the southeastern Gulf of Alaska
title_full_unstemmed A comparison of mechanical thickness estimates from trough and seamount loading in the southeastern Gulf of Alaska
title_sort comparison of mechanical thickness estimates from trough and seamount loading in the southeastern gulf of alaska
publisher American Geophysical Union
url https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/8s45qb514
long_lat ENVELOPE(-132.088,-132.088,53.255,53.255)
ENVELOPE(-133.500,-133.500,53.000,53.000)
geographic Gulf of Alaska
Queen Charlotte
Queen Charlotte Trough
geographic_facet Gulf of Alaska
Queen Charlotte
Queen Charlotte Trough
genre Kodiak
Alaska
genre_facet Kodiak
Alaska
op_relation https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/8s45qb514
op_rights Copyright Not Evaluated
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