Mid-ocean ridge eruptive vent morphology and substructure:Evidence for dike widths, eruption rates, and evolution of eruptions and axial volcanic ridges

High-resolution side scan sonar data of Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR) inner valley floor axial volcanic ridges reveal details of their architectural elements. We develop quantitative models for basaltic eruptions from dikes and compare the predicted products of these eruptions with the observed morpholog...

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Published in:Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth
Main Authors: Head, James W., Wilson, Lionel, Smith, Deborah K.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 1996
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/134660/
https://doi.org/10.1029/96JB02275
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spelling ftulancaster:oai:eprints.lancs.ac.uk:134660 2023-08-27T04:10:14+02:00 Mid-ocean ridge eruptive vent morphology and substructure:Evidence for dike widths, eruption rates, and evolution of eruptions and axial volcanic ridges Head, James W. Wilson, Lionel Smith, Deborah K. 1996-12-10 https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/134660/ https://doi.org/10.1029/96JB02275 unknown Head, James W. and Wilson, Lionel and Smith, Deborah K. (1996) Mid-ocean ridge eruptive vent morphology and substructure:Evidence for dike widths, eruption rates, and evolution of eruptions and axial volcanic ridges. Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth, 101 (B12). pp. 28265-28280. ISSN 2169-9313 Journal Article PeerReviewed 1996 ftulancaster https://doi.org/10.1029/96JB02275 2023-08-03T22:35:59Z High-resolution side scan sonar data of Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR) inner valley floor axial volcanic ridges reveal details of their architectural elements. We develop quantitative models for basaltic eruptions from dikes and compare the predicted products of these eruptions with the observed morphologic features. Inhibition of gas exsolution, lack of magma disruption, and hydrothermal effects combine to decrease the rise speed of magma in submarine dikes and enhance cooling, leading to more rapid centralization of eruptions along the widest places in the dike. Dikes are predicted to initially feed eruptions from fissure vents, producing lines of hummocky ridges; centralization of activity to several adjacent vents produces chains of hummocky bulbous mounds and can enhance the effusion rate at a single vent to produce small seamounts. The widest dikes are predicted to produce smooth flows up to several kilometers in length, which should pond in adjacent lows. Edifice sizes predicted on the basis of volume fluxes, and flow lengths implied by the widths of dikes observed on the seafloor, in Iceland and in ophiolite complexes, are in quantitative agreement with the dimensions of observed features. Each ridge is made up of the products of a variety of these individual dike-emplacement and extrusive events involving various dike widths, cooling times, and eruption durations. On the basis of typical MAR spreading rates, about one dike emplacement event would be expected every 40 years; since not all dikes reach the surface, the actual mean interval between eruptions will exceed this. MAR dikes should solidify between average dike emplacement events. Dike emplacement events are more frequent on the East Pacific Rise (EPR) and thus new dikes are more likely to reoccupy the sites of incompletely solidified older dikes. Differences between the morphology of the MAR axial volcanic ridge and the sheet flow dominated EPR are attributed to on average wider dikes erupting with greater frequency along the EPR. Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland Lancaster University: Lancaster Eprints Mid-Atlantic Ridge Pacific Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth 101 B12 28265 28280
institution Open Polar
collection Lancaster University: Lancaster Eprints
op_collection_id ftulancaster
language unknown
description High-resolution side scan sonar data of Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR) inner valley floor axial volcanic ridges reveal details of their architectural elements. We develop quantitative models for basaltic eruptions from dikes and compare the predicted products of these eruptions with the observed morphologic features. Inhibition of gas exsolution, lack of magma disruption, and hydrothermal effects combine to decrease the rise speed of magma in submarine dikes and enhance cooling, leading to more rapid centralization of eruptions along the widest places in the dike. Dikes are predicted to initially feed eruptions from fissure vents, producing lines of hummocky ridges; centralization of activity to several adjacent vents produces chains of hummocky bulbous mounds and can enhance the effusion rate at a single vent to produce small seamounts. The widest dikes are predicted to produce smooth flows up to several kilometers in length, which should pond in adjacent lows. Edifice sizes predicted on the basis of volume fluxes, and flow lengths implied by the widths of dikes observed on the seafloor, in Iceland and in ophiolite complexes, are in quantitative agreement with the dimensions of observed features. Each ridge is made up of the products of a variety of these individual dike-emplacement and extrusive events involving various dike widths, cooling times, and eruption durations. On the basis of typical MAR spreading rates, about one dike emplacement event would be expected every 40 years; since not all dikes reach the surface, the actual mean interval between eruptions will exceed this. MAR dikes should solidify between average dike emplacement events. Dike emplacement events are more frequent on the East Pacific Rise (EPR) and thus new dikes are more likely to reoccupy the sites of incompletely solidified older dikes. Differences between the morphology of the MAR axial volcanic ridge and the sheet flow dominated EPR are attributed to on average wider dikes erupting with greater frequency along the EPR.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Head, James W.
Wilson, Lionel
Smith, Deborah K.
spellingShingle Head, James W.
Wilson, Lionel
Smith, Deborah K.
Mid-ocean ridge eruptive vent morphology and substructure:Evidence for dike widths, eruption rates, and evolution of eruptions and axial volcanic ridges
author_facet Head, James W.
Wilson, Lionel
Smith, Deborah K.
author_sort Head, James W.
title Mid-ocean ridge eruptive vent morphology and substructure:Evidence for dike widths, eruption rates, and evolution of eruptions and axial volcanic ridges
title_short Mid-ocean ridge eruptive vent morphology and substructure:Evidence for dike widths, eruption rates, and evolution of eruptions and axial volcanic ridges
title_full Mid-ocean ridge eruptive vent morphology and substructure:Evidence for dike widths, eruption rates, and evolution of eruptions and axial volcanic ridges
title_fullStr Mid-ocean ridge eruptive vent morphology and substructure:Evidence for dike widths, eruption rates, and evolution of eruptions and axial volcanic ridges
title_full_unstemmed Mid-ocean ridge eruptive vent morphology and substructure:Evidence for dike widths, eruption rates, and evolution of eruptions and axial volcanic ridges
title_sort mid-ocean ridge eruptive vent morphology and substructure:evidence for dike widths, eruption rates, and evolution of eruptions and axial volcanic ridges
publishDate 1996
url https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/134660/
https://doi.org/10.1029/96JB02275
geographic Mid-Atlantic Ridge
Pacific
geographic_facet Mid-Atlantic Ridge
Pacific
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation Head, James W. and Wilson, Lionel and Smith, Deborah K. (1996) Mid-ocean ridge eruptive vent morphology and substructure:Evidence for dike widths, eruption rates, and evolution of eruptions and axial volcanic ridges. Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth, 101 (B12). pp. 28265-28280. ISSN 2169-9313
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1029/96JB02275
container_title Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth
container_volume 101
container_issue B12
container_start_page 28265
op_container_end_page 28280
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