Seismic imaging of thickened lithosphere resulting from plume pulsing beneath Iceland

Ocean plates conductively cool and subside with seafloor age. Plate thickening with age is also predicted, and hotspots may cause thinning. However, both are debated and depend on the way the plate is defined. Determining the thickness of the plates along with the process that governs it has proven...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems
Main Authors: Rychert, Catherine, Harmon, Nicholas, Armitage, John
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/421423/
https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/421423/1/Rychert_et_al_2018_Geochemistry_2C_Geophysics_2C_Geosystems.pdf
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Summary:Ocean plates conductively cool and subside with seafloor age. Plate thickening with age is also predicted, and hotspots may cause thinning. However, both are debated and depend on the way the plate is defined. Determining the thickness of the plates along with the process that governs it has proven challenging. We use S‐to‐P (Sp) receiver functions to image a strong, persistent LAB beneath Iceland where the mid‐Atlantic Ridge interacts with a plume with hypothesized pulsating thermal anomaly. The plate is thickest, up to 84 ± 6 km, beneath lithosphere formed during times of hypothesized hotter plume temperatures and as thin as 61 ± 6 km beneath regions formed during colder intervals. We performed geodynamic modeling to show that these plate thicknesses are inconsistent with a thermal lithosphere. Instead, periods of increased plume temperatures likely increased the melting depth, causing deeper depletion and dehydration, and creating a thicker plate. This suggests plate thickness is dictated by the conditions of plate formation.