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  • English  (4)
  • 2005-2009  (4)
  • 2009  (4)
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  • English  (4)
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  • 2005-2009  (4)
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  • 1
    In: Geophysical journal international, Oxford : Oxford Univ. Press, 1958, 178(2009), 2, Seite 1112-1131, 1365-246X
    In: volume:178
    In: year:2009
    In: number:2
    In: pages:1112-1131
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: graph. Darst
    ISSN: 1365-246X
    Language: English
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  • 2
    In: Geophysical journal international, Oxford : Oxford Univ. Press, 1958, 179(2009), 2, Seite 827-849, 1365-246X
    In: volume:179
    In: year:2009
    In: number:2
    In: pages:827-849
    Description / Table of Contents: The Central Costa Rican Pacific margin is characterized by a high-seismicity rate, coincident with the subduction of rough-relief ocean floor and has generated earthquakes with magnitude up to seven in the past. We inverted selected P-wave traveltimes from earthquakes recorded by a combined on- and offshore seismological array deployed during 6 months in the area, simultaneously determining hypocentres and the 3-D tomographic velocity structure on the shallow part of the subduction zone (〈70 km). The results reflect the complexity associated to subduction of ocean-floor morphology and the transition from normal to thickened subducting oceanic crust. The subducting slab is imaged as a high-velocity perturbation with a band of low velocities (LVB) on top encompassing the intraslab seismicity deeper than ~30 km. The LVB is locally thickened by the presence of at least two subducted seamounts beneath the margin wedge. There is a general eastward widening of the LVB over a relatively short distance, closely coinciding with the onset of an inverted forearc basin onshore and the appearance of an aseismic low-velocity anomaly beneath the inner forearc. The latter coincides spatially with an area of the subaerial forearc where differential uplift of blocks has been described, suggesting tectonic underplating of eroded material against the base of the upper plate crust. Alternatively, the low velocities could be induced by an accumulation of upward migrating fluids. Other observed velocity perturbations are attributed to several processes taking place at different depths, such as slab hydration through outer rise faulting, tectonic erosion and slab dehydration.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: graph. Darst
    ISSN: 1365-246X
    Language: English
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  • 3
    In: Journal of geophysical research. B, Solid earth, Hoboken, NJ : Wiley, 1978, 114(2009), 2169-9356
    In: volume:114
    In: year:2009
    In: extent:20
    Description / Table of Contents: Two end-member styles of crustal accretion are observed at two adjacent spreading segments at the Mid-Atlantic Ridge at 5°S: focused accretion to the segment center with rapid crustal thinning toward the transform in the northern segment and crustal thickening toward the transform at an oceanic core complex in the southern segment. Our results were obtained by tomographic inversion of wide-angle seismic reflection and refraction data collected along three intersecting profiles. The segment north of the 5°S fracture zone is characterized by a well-developed median valley with a pronounced seafloor bulge in the segment center. A discrete portion of anomalously low velocities (-0.4 to -0.5 km/s relative to average off-axis structure) at depths of ~2.5 km beneath this bulge is possibly related to the presence of elevated temperatures and perhaps small portions of partial melt. This suggests that this segment is currently in a magmatically active period, which is confirmed by the observation of fresh lava flows and ongoing high-temperature hydrothermal activity at the seafloor. Close to the current spreading axis, the crust thins rapidly from 8.5 km beneath the segment center to less than 3 km beneath the transform fault which indicates that melt supply here is strongly focused to the segment center. The reduction in crustal thickness is almost exclusively accommodated by the thinning of velocity portions indicative of seismic layer 3. The transform fault is characterized by more uniform velocity gradients throughout the entire crustal section and very low upper mantle velocities of 7.2-7.3 km/s indicating that serpentinization could be as much as 25% at 3.5 km depth. In contrast, ~4.1 Ma old crust of the northern segment shows only minor thinning from the segment center toward the segment end. Here, the transform is characterized by a normal seismic layer 2/3 transition suggesting robust melt supply to the segment end at those times. In the adjacent southern segment, the crust thickens from ~2.5 km beneath the flank of an oceanic core complex to ~5.0 km at the segment boundary. The observed changes in crustal thickness show a significant temporal and lateral variability in melt supply and suggest a more complex crustal emplacement process than predicted by models of focused melt supply to the segment centers.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 20 , graph. Darst
    ISSN: 2169-9356
    Language: English
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  • 4
    In: Tectonophysics, Amsterdam [u.a.] : Elsevier, 1964, 468(2009), 1/4, Seite 206-223, 1879-3266
    In: volume:468
    In: year:2009
    In: number:1/4
    In: pages:206-223
    Description / Table of Contents: Continental rifting at the Vøring Margin off mid-Norway was initiated during the earliest Eocene (~ 54 Ma), and large volumes of magmatic rocks were emplaced during and after continental breakup. In 2003, a marine survey collecting ocean bottom seismometer, single-channel reflection, and magnetic data was conducted on the Norwegian Margin to constrain continental breakup and early seafloor spreading processes. The profile described here crosses the northern part of the Vøring Plateau, and the crustal velocity model was constructed through a combination of ray-tracing and forward gravity modeling, the latter corrected for the thermal effects remaining from the seafloor spreading. We found a maximum igneous crustal thickness of 18 km, decreasing to 6.5 km over the first ~ 6 M.y. after continental breakup. Both the volume and the duration of excess magmatism are about twice as large as that of the Møre Margin south of the East Jan Mayen Fracture Zone, which offsets the two margin segments by ~ 170 km. A similar reduction in magmatism occurs to the north over an along-margin distance of ~ 150 km to the Lofoten Margin, but without a margin offset. Both the geochemical data and the mean P-wave velocity indicate that there is active mantle upwelling combined with a moderate temperature increase during the earliest mantle melting at the Vøring Margin. The mean P-wave velocity versus crustal thickness also indicates that there is a transition from convection dominated to temperature dominated magma production ~ 2 M.y. after breakup. The magnetic data were used to derive plate half-spreading rates for the Northern Vøring Margin, which are very similar to that obtained at the Møre Margin. There is a strong correlation between magma productivity and early plate spreading rate, suggesting a common cause. A model for the breakup-related magmatism should be able to explain this correlation, but also the magma production peak at breakup, the along-margin magmatic segmentation, and the active mantle upwelling. Proposed end-member hypotheses comprise elevated upper-mantle temperatures caused by a hot mantle plume, or edge-driven small-scale convection fluxing mantle rocks through the melt zone. Edge-driven convection does not easily explain these observations, but a mantle plume model in which buoyant plume material flows laterally to pond in the rift-topography at the base of the lithosphere close to breakup time is promising: When the continents break apart, the hot and buoyant plume-material can flow up into the rift zone from surrounding areas as the rift transits to drift, and the excess temperature of this material will then cause excess magmatism which dies off as the rift-restricted material is spent. The buoyancy of the plume-material may in addition cause active upwelling which can increase the melting furthermore, and also increase the force on the plate boundaries to enhance plate spreading rate. This conceptual model explains how both excess magmatism and spreading rate will be reduced similarly with time as the plume material is consumed by plate spreading, and thus correlate.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: graph. Darst
    ISSN: 1879-3266
    Language: English
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