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  • 1995-1999  (15)
  • 1
    In: Geowissenschaften, Berlin : Ernst & Sohn, 1988, 15(1997), 9, Seite 306-309, 0933-0704
    In: volume:15
    In: year:1997
    In: number:9
    In: pages:306-309
    Type of Medium: Article
    Pages: Ill.
    ISSN: 0933-0704
    Language: German
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  • 2
    In: Geowissenschaften, Berlin : Ernst & Sohn, 1988, 15(1997), 9, Seite 301-305, 0933-0704
    In: volume:15
    In: year:1997
    In: number:9
    In: pages:301-305
    Type of Medium: Article
    Pages: Ill., Kt.
    ISSN: 0933-0704
    Language: German
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] THE size and shape of mantle upwelling regions provide important constraints on the thermal budget of the Earth and on models of mantle dynamics. Most hotspot tracks are no more than 200-400 km wide, suggesting that upwelling regions are often relatively narrow features, of the order of a few ...
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2018-12-20
    Description: Thermal Ionization Mass Spectrometry (TIMS) and Synchrotron X-Ray Fluoresence (SYXRF) are two methods for analyzing the isotope and trace element compositions of geological materials (e.g. rocks and fluids), in order to reconstruct their origin and history. We present several examples of how geological problems can be solved using these analytical methods: 1) age-dating of the oceanic crust beneath Gran Canaria (Canary Islands) using the Sm-Nd isotopic system, 2) tracing the origin of volcanic seamounts, ridges and ophiolites along the Pacific margin of Costa Rica with radiogenic isotope systems (Sr, Nd and Pb), 3) evaluating the role of seawater alteration on the composition of the oceanic crust using B isotopes, and 4) determining the input of halogens and other elements into the stratosphere during volcanic eruptions and assessing their effect on the ozone layer.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2020-02-13
    Description: The structural, temporal, compositional and volcanic evolution of oceanic intraplate islands is one of the major research areas in our department. A regional focus is on the island groups and seamounts along the passive margin off Northwest Africa. The Canary Islands which are characterized by an unususally large compositional spectrum of igneous rocks and long magmatic histories, exceeding 20 Ma in some islands, are the main target area for our ongoing combined on- and offshore studies. We here report on specific events and stages in the structural and chemical evolution of the island of Gran Canaria and its sedimentary apron using a variety of methods. Detailed studies of constructive and destructive processes during island evolution have allowed to predict - and verify by deep sea drilling - the submarine and subaerial evolution of Gran Canaria and its surrounding sedimentary basins. Our aim is to develop a globally representative model explaining the evolution of volcanic islands including aspects of volcanic hazards related to explosive eruptions and tsunamis triggered by island flank collapses.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2017-02-27
    Description: Seismic tomography and the isotope geochemistry of Cenozoic volcanic rocks suggest the existence of a large, sheet-like region of upwelling in the upper mantle which extends from the eastern Atlantic Ocean to central Europe and the western Mediterranean. A belt of extension and rifting in the latter two areas appears to lie above the intersection of the centre of the upwelling region with the base of the lithosphere. Lead, strontium and neodymium isotope data for all three regions converge on a restricted composition, inferred to be that of the upwelling mantle.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 7
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    Elsevier
    In:  Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, 94 (1-4). pp. 267-282.
    Publication Date: 2017-07-20
    Description: The compositionally zoned San Juan eruption on La Palma emanated from three eruptive centers located along a north–south-trending rift zone in the south of the island. Seismic precursors began weakly in 1936 and became strong in March 1949, with their foci progressing from the north of the rift zone towards its south. This suggests that magma ascended beneath the old Taburiente shield volcano and moved southward along the rift. The eruption began on June 24, 1949, with phreatomagmatic activity at Duraznero crater on the ridgetop (ca. 1880 m above sea level), where five vents erupted tephritic lava along a 400-m-long fissure. On June 8, the Duraznero vents shut down abruptly, and the activity shifted to an off-rift fissure at Llano del Banco, located at ca. 550 m lower elevation and 3 km to the northwest. This eruptive center issued initially tephritic aa and later basanitic pahoehoe lava at high rates, producing a lava flow that entered the sea. Two days after basanite began to erupt at Llano del Banco, Hoyo Negro crater (ca. 1880 m asl), located 700 m north of Duraznero along the rift, opened on July 12 and produced ash and bombs of basanitic to phonotephritic composition in violent phreatomagmatic explosions (White and Schmincke, 1999). Llano del Banco and Hoyo Negro were simultaneously active for 11 days and showed a co-variance of their eruption rates indicating a shallow hydraulic connection. On July 30, after 3 days of quiescence at all vents, Duraznero and Hoyo Negro became active again during a final eruptive phase. Duraznero issued basanitic lava at high rates for 12 h and produced a lava flow that descended towards the east coast. The lava contains ca. 1 vol.% crustal and mantle xenoliths consisting of 40% tholeiitic gabbros from the oceanic crust, 35% alkaline gabbros, and 20% ultramafic cumulates. The occurrence of xenoliths almost exclusively in the final lava is consistent with their origin by wall-rock collapse at depth near the end of the eruption. The volcanic evolution of the 1949 eruption is typical of La Palma eruptions generally. Considerable shallow magma migration prior to and during eruption is manifested by strong seismicity, intense faulting, and the almost unpredictable opening of specific vents which can be spaced three or more km apart.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2016-11-15
    Description: Gabbro and minor metabasalt fragments of MORB composition were found on three of the seven Canary Islands. On Gran Canaria, they occur as metamorphosed (greenschist facies) metabasalt and metagabbro clasts in Miocene fanglomerates and sandstones overlying the shield basalts. On Lanzarote and La Palma, MORB gabbros occur as xenoliths in Pleistocene and historic basanite scoria cones and lava flows. The MORB xenoliths are interpreted as fragments of layers 2 and 3 of the underlying Mesozoic oceanic crust, based on mineral compositions (An-rich plagioclase, Ti- and Al-poor clinopyroxene, ± orthopyroxene ± olivine), depleted major and trace element signatures, and Jurassic ages (ca. 180 Ma) determined on single primary plagioclase and secondary amphibole crystals using the 40Ar/39Ar laser technique. The Lanzarote gabbros are very mafic (mg# 87 to 89 in clinopyroxene), moderately deformed, and highly depleted. Gran Canaria gabbros are more evolved (mg# 69 to 83 in clinopyroxene) and texturally mostly isotropic. La Palma MORB gabbros have a range of compositions (mg# 68 to 83 in clinopyroxene), some rocks being strongly metasomatized by interaction with basanite magma. The occurrence of MORB fragments on Lanzarote provides definite evidence that oceanic crust beneath the Canary Island archipelago continues at least as far east as the eastern Canary Islands. We postulate that MORB gabbros on Lanzarote which are commonly associated with peridotite xenoliths, represent the base of oceanic layer 3 where gabbros and peridotites were possibly tectonically interleaved. Such tectonic mixing would explain the enigmatic seismic velocities in this area. Gabbro xenoliths from La Palma were derived from within layer 3, probably from wall rock close to magma reservoirs emplaced during the Pleistocene/Holocene growth of La Palma. The Gran Canaria xenoliths are interpreted to represent the metamorphosed layer 2 and upper layer 3. The abundance of lower crustal xenoliths emphasizes the importance of the lower crust and crust-mantle boundary zone as a major level of magma accumulation.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2019-10-24
    Description: Volcanic rocks were dredged from the Cocos and Fisher ridges and seamounts along a 250 km profile parallel to the Pacific coast of Costa Rica. The composition and laser 40Ar/39Ar ages of the Cocos Ridge and Seamounts are consistent with their formation above the Galápagos hotspot 13.0–14.5 Ma. The reconstructed paleoenvironment and chemistry of the Fisher Ridge are consistent with it having originated at a mid-oceanic ridge system. Laser 40Ar/39Ar dating of fresh basalt glass from the Fisher Ridge yielded isochron ages of 19.2 ± 0.3 Ma and 30.0 ± 0.5 Ma. The Fisher Ridge is along a lithospheric fault that may represent an extensional fracture formed when the oceanic floor rode over the Galápagos hotspot. Even though the younger structures are currently at water depths of 〉1000 m, volcanological, geochemical, and geophysical observations indicate that they once formed an emerged archipelago very similar in morphology to the Galápagos islands. The diversity of the biota on the isolated Galápagos islands, as first described by Charles Darwin, has had an important influence on the development of the theory of evolution. The existence of a now-drowned Galápagos archipelago 14.5 Ma considerably increases speciation times for the Galápagos biota and provides a complete solution to a long-standing controversy concerning the divergence of the Galápagos marine and land iguanas from a single ancestral species.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2017-10-11
    Description: Osmium concentrations and isotopic signatures were measured in 28 primarily Holocene basalts (22 of which have been analyzed for Sr–Nd–Pb isotope composition), two carbonatites and two mantle xenoliths from the Canary Islands, Selvagen Grande and Madeira in the eastern North Atlantic. 187Os/188Os ratios in the basalts range from 0.129 to 0.183. The Os isotope systematics indicate that the basalts fall into three petrogenetic groups: (1) a ‘radiogenic’ group with high 187Os/188Os from 0.152 to 0.183; (2) an ‘unradiogenic’ group with low 187Os/188Os from 0.129 to 0.138; (3) an ‘intermediate’ group with 187Os/188Os between 0.139 and 0.151. The Os isotope systematics of the radiogenic group samples are consistent with minor contamination of the basalts by marine sediment. All samples in the unradiogenic group contain mantle xenoliths, and the unradiogenic Os can be explained by bulk assimilation of ≤ 5% mantle peridotite in the form of disaggregated xenoliths. The radiogenic and unradiogenic groups are also characterized by higher 87Sr/86Sr and 208Pb/204Pb but lower 143Nd/144Nd than samples with similar 206Pb/204Pb from the intermediate group, which is interpreted to reflect interaction of plume magmas with the lithospheric mantle. The intermediate group samples are believed to represent the isotopic signature of the mantle plume. The Os isotopic composition of the Canary plume is among the most radiogenic found in ocean island basalts, comparable with the endmember HIMU islands Mangaia and Tubuaii, but at significantly lower 206Pb/204Pb. The radiogenic Os and moderate 206Pb/204Pb signature of the Canary plume is consistent with a plume which contains 25–35% of relatively young (∼1.2 Ga) recycled oceanic crust. Variable degree of mixing of the Canary Island plume source with shallow depleted asthenosphere containing a component of Paleozoic oceanic crust produces the limited range in Os isotopic signatures observed in the Madeira and Canary Island basalts despite a large range in 206Pb/204Pb isotopic composition.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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