More on the recent advances in deep imaging of the earth's crust.
The melt zone under the ridge is deeper and thicker than imagined but
becoming clearer. Sooner or later we can expect to map the whole
crust to a decent level of resolution.
The most important understanding coming out of all this is that
liquid means liquid somewhere down there. We are not talking about a
glacial creep here.
Fine resolution will also clearly map sinking plate segments as well
which will make interesting text books.
I assume that the deep working liquid happens to be molten basalt and
that during a major continental sized eruption, the fluid flow is
super thick and the flow movement is very quick. Recall that our own
downhill flows in Hawaii are fast and naturally cool quite slowly.
Thus it is easy to understand the monsters such as the Deccan Traps
and the Snake River basalts.
Scripps scientists
image deep magma beneath Pacific seafloor volcano
by Staff Writers
San Diego CA (SPX) Apr 02, 2013
The northern East
Pacific Rise is an area where two of the planet's tectonic plates are
spreading apart from each another. Mantle rising between the plates
melts to generate the magma that forms fresh seafloor when it erupts
or freezes in the crust.
Since the plate
tectonics revolution of the 1960s, scientists have known that new
seafloor is created throughout the major ocean basins at linear
chains of volcanoes known as mid-ocean ridges. But where exactly does
the erupted magma come from?
Researchers at Scripps
Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego now have a better idea
after capturing a unique image of a site deep in the earth where
magma is generated.
Using
electromagnetic technology developed and advanced at Scripps, the
researchers mapped a large area beneath the seafloor off Central
America at the northern East Pacific Rise, a seafloor volcano located
on a section of the global mid-ocean ridges that together form the
largest and most active chain of volcanoes in the solar system. By
comparison, the researchers say the cross-section area of the melting
region they mapped would rival the size of San Diego County.
Details of the image
and the methods used to capture it are published in the March 28
issue of the journal Nature.
"Our data show
that mantle upwelling beneath the mid-ocean ridge creates a deeper
and broader melting region than previously thought," said Kerry
Key, lead author of the study and an associate research geophysicist
at Scripps. "This was the largest project of its kind, enabling
us to image the mantle with a level of detail not possible with
previous studies."
The northern East
Pacific Rise is an area where two of the planet's tectonic plates are
spreading apart from each another. Mantle rising between the plates
melts to generate the magma that forms fresh seafloor when it erupts
or freezes in the crust.
Data for the study was
obtained during a 2004 field study conducted aboard the research
vessel Roger Revelle, a ship operated by Scripps and owned by the
U.S. Navy.
The marine
electromagnetic technology behind the study was originally developed
in the 1960s by Charles "Chip" Cox, an emeritus professor
of oceanography at Scripps, and his student Jean Filloux. In recent
years the technology was further advanced by Steven Constable and
Key. Since 1995 Scripps researchers have been working with the energy
industry to apply this technology to map offshore geology as an aid
to exploring for oil and gas reservoirs.
"We have been
working on developing our instruments and interpretation software for
decades, and it is really exciting to see it all come together to
provide insights into the fundamental processes of plate tectonics,"
said Constable, a coauthor of the paper and a professor in the Cecil
H. and Ida M. Green Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics at
Scripps. "It was really a surprise to discover that melting
started so deep in the mantle-much deeper than was expected."
Key believes the
insights that electromagnetics provides will continue to grow as the
technology matures and data analysis techniques improve (last week
Key and his colleagues announced the use of electromagnetics in
discovering a magma lubricant for the planet's tectonic plates).
"Electromagnetics
is really coming of age as a tool for imaging the earth," said
Key. "Much of what we know about the crust and mantle is a
result of using seismic techniques. Now electromagnetic technology is
offering promise for further discoveries."
Key also has future
plans to apply electromagnetic technology to map subglacial lakes and
groundwater in the polar regions.
In addition to Key and
Constable, coauthors of the paper include Lijun Liu of the University
of Illinois and Anne Pommier of Arizona State University. The study
was supported by the National Science Foundation and the Seafloor
Electromagnetic Methods Consortium at Scripps. The Scripps Marine
Electromagnetics Laboratory currently supports five graduate student
researchers and five full-time staff. More information about this
project and the Scripps Marine Electromagnetics Laboratory is
available here.
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