Crustal accretion at high temperature spreading centres: Rheological control of crustal thickness

Abstract New determinations of lateral crustal thickness variations at anomalous oceanic spreading centres such as Iceland have shown that the crust may be thinner at the ridge axis above the plume thickening towards the sides (Bjarnason and Schmeling, 2009). To understand this behaviour crustal acc...

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Published in:Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2262/63585
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pepi.2010.10.004
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spelling fttrinitycoll:oai:tara.tcd.ie:2262/63585 2023-05-15T16:48:05+02:00 Crustal accretion at high temperature spreading centres: Rheological control of crustal thickness 2012-05-30T00:54:38Z http://hdl.handle.net/2262/63585 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pepi.2010.10.004 en eng Elsevier 00319201 (ISSN) S0031-9201(10)00200-1 (PII) S0031-9201(10)00200-1 (publisherID) http://hdl.handle.net/2262/63585 Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors 183 3-4 447 doi:10.1016/j.pepi.2010.10.004 2010 18 months Iceland oceanic spreading ridge crust formation plume-ridge interaction magmatism 2012 fttrinitycoll https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pepi.2010.10.004 2020-02-16T13:53:42Z Abstract New determinations of lateral crustal thickness variations at anomalous oceanic spreading centres such as Iceland have shown that the crust may be thinner at the ridge axis above the plume thickening towards the sides (Bjarnason and Schmeling, 2009). To understand this behaviour crustal accretion models have been carried out solving the conservation equations of mass, momentum and energy with melting, melt extraction, and feedback of extracted material as newly formed crust for an extending lithosphere system underlain by a hot mantle plume. The dynamics of rifting are thermally and rheologically controlled by the feedback due to accreted new crust. Four accretional modes with characteristic crustal thickness variations are identified depending on the width of the volcanic emplacement zone, the accretional heating rate, which can be associated with the thickness of the surface layer in which magmatic emplacement takes place, and the spreading rate. Mode 1: Zero crustal thickness at the spreading axis develops for cool accretion and a wide emplacement zone. Mode 2: Strongly or moderately crustal thickening away from the axis develops in case of warm (deep reaching) accretion and wide emplacement zones. Mode 3: Nearly constant crustal thickness develops in case of warm (deep reaching) accretion but narrow emplacement zones. Dynamic topography of mode 3 shows only a weak or no regional minimum at all near the axis. Mode 2 or 3 may be identified with the situation in Iceland. Mode 4: A stagnating central crustal block evolves for cool accretion and narrow emplacement. This mode disappears for increasing spreading rates. No accretional mode with maximum crustal thickness above the plume at the rift axis has been found. The absence of mode 1 accretion (with zero crust at ridge axis) on earth may be an indication that in general crustal accretion is not cold (and shallow). The model is also applied to other hotspot-ridge settings (Azores, Galapagos) and suggests mode 2 to 3 accretion. Department of Geology and Geophysics - SOEST--> , 1680 East-West Rd. University of Hawaii--> , Honolulu--> , HI 96822--> - (Schmeling, Harro) GERMANY (Schmeling, Harro) GERMANY Received: 2009-10-07 Revised: 2010-09-27 Accepted: 2010-10-02 Other/Unknown Material Iceland The University of Dublin, Trinity College: TARA (Trinity's Access to Research Archive) Galapagos Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors 183 3-4 447 455
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Dublin, Trinity College: TARA (Trinity's Access to Research Archive)
op_collection_id fttrinitycoll
language English
topic Iceland
oceanic spreading ridge
crust formation
plume-ridge interaction
magmatism
spellingShingle Iceland
oceanic spreading ridge
crust formation
plume-ridge interaction
magmatism
Crustal accretion at high temperature spreading centres: Rheological control of crustal thickness
topic_facet Iceland
oceanic spreading ridge
crust formation
plume-ridge interaction
magmatism
description Abstract New determinations of lateral crustal thickness variations at anomalous oceanic spreading centres such as Iceland have shown that the crust may be thinner at the ridge axis above the plume thickening towards the sides (Bjarnason and Schmeling, 2009). To understand this behaviour crustal accretion models have been carried out solving the conservation equations of mass, momentum and energy with melting, melt extraction, and feedback of extracted material as newly formed crust for an extending lithosphere system underlain by a hot mantle plume. The dynamics of rifting are thermally and rheologically controlled by the feedback due to accreted new crust. Four accretional modes with characteristic crustal thickness variations are identified depending on the width of the volcanic emplacement zone, the accretional heating rate, which can be associated with the thickness of the surface layer in which magmatic emplacement takes place, and the spreading rate. Mode 1: Zero crustal thickness at the spreading axis develops for cool accretion and a wide emplacement zone. Mode 2: Strongly or moderately crustal thickening away from the axis develops in case of warm (deep reaching) accretion and wide emplacement zones. Mode 3: Nearly constant crustal thickness develops in case of warm (deep reaching) accretion but narrow emplacement zones. Dynamic topography of mode 3 shows only a weak or no regional minimum at all near the axis. Mode 2 or 3 may be identified with the situation in Iceland. Mode 4: A stagnating central crustal block evolves for cool accretion and narrow emplacement. This mode disappears for increasing spreading rates. No accretional mode with maximum crustal thickness above the plume at the rift axis has been found. The absence of mode 1 accretion (with zero crust at ridge axis) on earth may be an indication that in general crustal accretion is not cold (and shallow). The model is also applied to other hotspot-ridge settings (Azores, Galapagos) and suggests mode 2 to 3 accretion. Department of Geology and Geophysics - SOEST--> , 1680 East-West Rd. University of Hawaii--> , Honolulu--> , HI 96822--> - (Schmeling, Harro) GERMANY (Schmeling, Harro) GERMANY Received: 2009-10-07 Revised: 2010-09-27 Accepted: 2010-10-02
title Crustal accretion at high temperature spreading centres: Rheological control of crustal thickness
title_short Crustal accretion at high temperature spreading centres: Rheological control of crustal thickness
title_full Crustal accretion at high temperature spreading centres: Rheological control of crustal thickness
title_fullStr Crustal accretion at high temperature spreading centres: Rheological control of crustal thickness
title_full_unstemmed Crustal accretion at high temperature spreading centres: Rheological control of crustal thickness
title_sort crustal accretion at high temperature spreading centres: rheological control of crustal thickness
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2262/63585
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pepi.2010.10.004
geographic Galapagos
geographic_facet Galapagos
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation 00319201 (ISSN)
S0031-9201(10)00200-1 (PII)
S0031-9201(10)00200-1 (publisherID)
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/63585
Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors
183
3-4
447
doi:10.1016/j.pepi.2010.10.004
op_rights 2010
18 months
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pepi.2010.10.004
container_title Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors
container_volume 183
container_issue 3-4
container_start_page 447
op_container_end_page 455
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