scholarly journals Icelandic-type crust enigma solved

Author(s):  
Ilmo Kukkonen ◽  
Gillian Foulger

Abstract Although on the mid-Atlantic extensional plate boundary, the crust beneath Iceland is unlike any produced by sea-floor spreading 1,2. It is up to 40 km thick – 6-7 times thicker than typical oceanic crust 3,4, its seismic velocity gradients are inconsistent with a solely mafic petrology, its lower part has a density approaching that of the mantle, and lithosphere thickness is up to 100 km. Furthermore, downward continuation of surface high thermal gradients predict partial melt in the lower crust that is at odds with the subsolidus state detected by seismic measurements. For the last ~ 50 years it has been assumed that its unusually large thickness results from excess magma production in a hot source 5 but it cannot explain these observations. We model jointly the seismic and thermal data and show that they are consistent with stretched continental crust 6 overlain by a few kilometres of young flood basalts. This resembles a volcanic passive margin under construction. It is mechanically feasible 7 and compatible with the composition of Icelandic lavas. This solution is the first proposed that can explain the geophysical properties of Icelandic-type crust. It has major implications for Atlantic Ocean opening, the structure of passive margins, extent of continental crust in the oceans, natural resources and limits of national seaboards.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gillian Foulger ◽  
Laurent Gernigon ◽  
Laurent Geoffroy

<p>The NE Atlantic formed by complex, piecemeal breakup of Pangea in an environment of structural complexity. North of the present-day latitude of Iceland the ocean opened by southward propagation of the Aegir ridge. South of the present-day latitude of Iceland breakup occurred along the proto-Reykjanes ridge which formed laterally offset by ~ 100 km from the Aegir ridge to the north. Neither of these new breakup axes were able to propagate across the east-westerly striking Caledonian frontal thrust region which formed a strong barrier ~ 400 km wide. As a result, while sea-floor spreading widened the NE Atlantic, the Caledonian front region could only keep pace by diffuse stretching of the continental crust, which formed the aseismic Greenland-Iceland-Faroe ridge. The magmatic rate there was similar to that of the ridges to the north and south and so the stretched continental crust is now blanketed by thick mafic flows and intrusions. The NE Atlantic also contains a magma-inflated microcontinent – the Jan Mayen Microplate Complex, and an unknown but probably large amount of stretched continental crust blanketed by seaward-dipping reflectors in the passive margins of Norway and Greenland. The NE Atlantic thus contains voluminous continental crust in diverse forms and settings. If even a small portion of the sunken continental material contiguous with the Greenland-Iceland-Faroe ridge is included the area exceeds a million square kilometers, an arbitrary threshold suggested to designate a sunken continent. We have called this region Icelandia. The conditions and processes that funneled large quantities of continental crust into the NE Atlantic ocean are common elsewhere. This includes much of the North and South Atlantic oceans including both the seaboards and the deep oceans. Nor are such processes and outcomes confined to oceans bordered by passive margins. They are also found around the Pacific rims where subduction is in progress. Indeed, these conditions and processes likely are generic to essentially all the world's oceans and are potentially also informed by observations from intracontinental extensional regions and land-locked seas.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Jan Robert Baur

<p>This study investigates the nature, origin, and distribution of Cretaceous to Recent sediment fill in the offshore Taranaki Basin, western New Zealand. Seismic attributes and horizon interpretations on 30,000 km of 2D seismic reflection profiles and three 3D seismic surveys (3,000 km²) are used to image depositional systems and reconstruct paleogeography in detail and regionally, across a total area of ~100,000 km² from the basin's present-day inner shelf to deep water. These data are used to infer the influence of crustal tectonics and mantle dynamics on the development of depocentres and depositional pathways. During the Cretaceous to Eocene period the basin evolved from two separate rifts into a single broad passive margin. Extensional faulting ceased before 85 Ma in the present-day deep-water area of the southern New Caledonia Trough, but stretching of the lithosphere was higher (β=1.5-2) than in the proximal basin (β<1.5), where faulting continued into the Paleocene (~60 Ma). The resulting differential thermal subsidence caused northward tilting of the basin and influenced the distribution of sedimentary facies in the proximal basin. Attribute maps delineate the distribution of the basin's main petroleum source and reservoir facies, from a ~20,000 km²-wide, Late Cretaceous coastal plain across the present-day deep-water area, to transgressive shoreline belts and coastal plains in the proximal basin. Rapid subsidence began in the Oligocene and the development of a foredeep wedge through flexural loading of the eastern boundary of Taranaki Basin is tracked through the Middle Miocene. Total shortening within the basin was minor (5-8%) and slip was mostly accommodated on the basin-bounding Taranaki Fault Zone, which detached the basin from much greater Miocene plate boundary deformation further east. The imaging of turbidite facies and channels associated with the rapidly outbuilding shelf margin wedge illustrates the development of large axial drainage systems that transported sediment over hundreds of kilometres from the shelf to the deep-water basin since the Middle Miocene. Since the latest Miocene, south-eastern Taranaki Basin evolved from a compressional foreland to an extensional (proto-back-arc) basin. This structural evolution is characterised by: 1) cessation of intra-basinal thrusting by 7-5 Ma, 2) up to 700 m of rapid (>1000 m/my) tectonic subsidence in 100-200 km-wide, sub-circular depocentres between 6-4 Ma (without significant upper-crustal faulting), and 3) extensional faulting since 3.5-3 Ma. The rapid subsidence in the east caused the drastic modification of shelf margin geometry and sediment dispersal directions. Time and space scales of this subsidence point to lithospheric or asthenospheric mantle modification, which may be a characteristic process during back-arc basin development. Unusual downward vertical crustal movements of >1 km, as inferred from seismic facies, paleobathymetry and tectonic subsidence analysis, have created the present-day Deepwater Taranaki Basin physiography, but are not adequately explained by simple rift models. It is proposed that the distal basin, and perhaps even the more proximal Taranaki Paleogene passive margin, were substantially modified by mantle processes related to the initiation of subduction on the fledgling Australia-Pacific plate boundary north of New Zealand in the Eocene.</p>


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Milsom ◽  
Phil Roach ◽  
Chris Toland ◽  
Don Riaroh ◽  
Chris Budden ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT As part of an ongoing exploration effort, approximately 4000 line-km of seismic data have recently been acquired and interpreted within the Comoros Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ). Magnetic and gravity values were recorded along the seismic lines and have been integrated with pre-existing regional data. The combined data sets provide new constraints on the nature of the crust beneath the West Somali Basin (WSB), which was created when Africa broke away from Gondwanaland and began to move north. Despite the absence of clear sea-floor spreading magnetic anomalies or gravity anomalies defining a fracture zone pattern, the crust beneath the WSB has been generally assumed to be oceanic, based largely on regional reconstructions. However, inappropriate use of regional magnetic data has led to conclusions being drawn that are not supported by evidence. The identification of the exact location of the continent-ocean boundary (COB) is less simple than would at first sight appear and, in particular, recent studies have cast doubt on a direct correlation between the COB and the Davie Fracture Zone (DFZ). The new high-quality reflection seismic data have imaged fault patterns east of the DFZ more consistent with extended continental crust, and the accompanying gravity and magnetic surveys have shown that the crust in this area is considerably thicker than normal oceanic and that linear magnetic anomalies typical of sea-floor spreading are absent. Rifting in the basin was probably initiated in Karoo times but the generation of new oceanic crust may have been delayed until about 154 Ma, when there was a switch in extension direction from NW-SE to N-S. From then until about 120 Ma relative movement between Africa and Madagascar was accommodated by extension in the West Somali and Mozambique basins and transform motion along the DFZ that linked them. A new understanding of the WSB can be achieved by taking note of newly-emerging concepts and new data from adjacent areas. The better-studied Mozambique Basin, where comprehensive recent surveys have revealed an unexpectedly complex spreading history, may provide important analogues for some stages in WSB evolution. At the same time the importance of wide continent-ocean transition zones marked by the presence of hyper-extended continental crust has become widely recognised. We make use of these new insights in explaining the anomalous results from the southern WSB and in assessing the prospectivity of the Comoros EEZ.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charitra Jain ◽  
Antoine Rozel ◽  
Emily Chin ◽  
Jeroen van Hunen

&lt;div&gt;Geophysical, geochemical, and geological investigations have attributed the stable behaviour of Earth's continents to the presence of strong and viscous cratons underlying the continental crust. The cratons are underlain by thick and cold mantle keels, which are composed of melt-depleted and low density peridotite residues [1]. Progressive melt extraction increases the magnesium number Mg# in the residual peridotite, thereby making the roots of cratons chemically buoyant [2, 3] and counteracting their negative thermal buoyancy. Recent global models have shown the production of Archean continental crust by two-step mantle differentiation, however this primordial crust gets recycled and no stable continents form [4]. This points to the missing ingredient of cratonic lithosphere in these models, which could act as a stable basement for the crustal material to accumulate on and may also help with the transition of global regime from &quot;vertical tectonics'' to &quot;horizontal tectonics''. Based on the bulk FeO and MgO content of the residual peridotites, it has been proposed that cratonic mantle formed by hot shallow melting with mantle potential temperature, which was higher by 200-300 &amp;#176;C than present-day [5]. We introduce Fe-Mg partitioning between mantle peridotite and melt to track the Mg# variation through melting, and parametrise craton formation using the corresponding P-T formation conditions. Using self-consistent global convection models, we show the dynamic formation of cratons as a result of naturally occurring lateral compression and thickening of the lithosphere, which has been suggested by geochemical and petrological data. To allow for the material to compact and thicken, but prevent it from collapsing under its own weight, a combination of lithospheric strength, plastic yielding, dehydration strengthening, and depletion-induced density reduction of the depleted mantle material is necessary.&lt;/div&gt;&lt;div&gt;&amp;#160;&lt;/div&gt;&lt;div&gt;&amp;#160;[1] Boyd, F. R. High-and low-temperature garnet peridotite xenoliths and their possible relation to the lithosphere- asthenosphere boundary beneath Africa. In Nixon, P. H. (ed.) &lt;em&gt;Mantle Xenolith&lt;/em&gt;, 403&amp;#8211;412 (John Wiley &amp; Sons Ltd., 1987).&lt;/div&gt;&lt;div&gt;[2] Jordan, T. H. Mineralogies, densities and seismic velocities of garnet lherzolites and their geophysical implications. In &lt;em&gt;The Mantle Sample: Inclusion in Kimberlites and Other Volcanics&lt;/em&gt;, 1&amp;#8211;14 (American Geophysical Union, Washington, D. C., 1979).&lt;/div&gt;&lt;div&gt;[3] Schutt, D. L. &amp; Lesher, C. E. Effects of melt depletion on the density and seismic velocity of garnet and spinel lherzolite. &lt;em&gt;Journal of Geophysical Research &lt;/em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;111&lt;/strong&gt; (2006).&lt;/div&gt;&lt;div&gt;[4] Jain, C., Rozel, A. B., Tackley, P. J., Sanan, P. &amp; Gerya, T. V. Growing primordial continental crust self-consistently in global mantle convection models. &lt;em&gt;Gondwana Research&lt;/em&gt; &lt;strong&gt;73&lt;/strong&gt;, 96&amp;#8211;122 (2019).&lt;/div&gt;&lt;div&gt;[5] Lee, C.-T. A. &amp; Chin, E. J. Calculating melting temperatures and pressures of peridotite protoliths: Implications for the origin of cratonic mantle. &lt;em&gt;Earth and Planetary Science Letters&lt;/em&gt; &lt;strong&gt;403&lt;/strong&gt;, 273&amp;#8211;286 (2014)&lt;/div&gt;


2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-34 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ondřej Šrámek ◽  
William F. McDonough ◽  
John G. Learned

Neutrino geophysics is an emerging interdisciplinary field with the potential to map the abundances and distribution of radiogenic heat sources in the continental crust and deep Earth. To date, data from two different experiments quantify the amount of Th and U in the Earth and begin to put constraints on radiogenic power in the Earth available for driving mantle convection and plate tectonics. New improved detectors are under construction or in planning stages. Critical testing of compositional models of the Earth requires integrating geoneutrino and geological observations. Such tests will lead to significant constraints on the absolute and relative abundances of U and Th in the continents. High radioactivity in continental crust puts limits on land-based observatories' capacity to resolve mantle models with current detection methods. Multiple-site measurement in oceanic areas away from continental crust and nuclear reactors offers the best potential to extract mantle information. Geophysics would benefit from directional detection and the detectability of electron antineutrinos from potassium decay.


Elements ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (5) ◽  
pp. 319-324 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin A. Black ◽  
Sally A. Gibson

Carbon is central to the formation and environmental impact of large igneous provinces (LIPs). These vast magmatic events occur over geologically short timescales and include voluminous flood basalts, along with silicic and low-volume alkaline magmas. Surface outgassing of CO2 from flood basalts may average up to 3,000 Mt per year during LIP emplacement and is subsidized by fractionating magmas deep in the crust. The large quantities of carbon mobilized in LIPs may be sourced from the convecting mantle, lithospheric mantle and crust. The relative significance of each potential carbon source is poorly known and probably varies between LIPs. Because LIPs draw on mantle reservoirs typically untapped during plate boundary magmatism, they are integral to Earth's long-term carbon cycle.


The irreversible chemical differentiation of the Earth’s mantle to produce sialic crust over the past 3900 Ma has most probably occurred during widely separated, but short-lived, accretion episodes. These episodes involved the massive addition of juvenile sialic magma to the Earth’s surface, thickening pre-existing crust. Simple numerical simulations, based on tectonic, petrological and geochemical observations on Archaean high-grade orthogneiss terranes, have been used to explore the metamorphic and geochemical consequences of massive thickening of sialic crust during short-lived accretion episodes. The location of the main sites of magmatic addition within the crust exert a profound influence on the thermal régimes. Geochemical differentiation of the continental crust by partial-melt and vapour-phase-controlled processes, and the development of granulite facies mineral assemblages can be integrated with the simple numerical models. Finally, the survival of thick Archaean continental crust imples the contemporaneous stabilization of thick lithospheric substructures to the newly formed continental masses.


1995 ◽  
Vol 130 (1-4) ◽  
pp. 187-200 ◽  
Author(s):  
Urs Schärer ◽  
Jacques Kornprobst ◽  
Marie-Odile Beslier ◽  
Gilbert Boillot ◽  
Jacques Girardeau

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