Pacific hotspots reveal a Louisville-Ontong-Java Nui tectonic link
收藏DataONE2025-03-04 更新2025-04-26 收录
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Volcanic hotspots are thought to form by melting in an upwelling mantle plume head followed by melting of the plume tail. Plate motion then generates an age-progressive volcanic track originating from a large igneous province (LIP) to a presently-active hotspot. The most voluminous LIP, the ~120 Ma Ontong-Java Nui Plateau (OJP-Nui) in the mid-Pacific, however, lacks an obvious volcanic track. Although the Louisville hotspot track was originally proposed as a candidate, limited constraints for Pacific absolute plate and plume motion prior to 80 Ma suggest a mismatch1. Existing Pacific models rely on age-distance data from the continuous Hawaiʻi-Emperor and Louisville tracks, but their tracks older than ~80 Ma are subducted. Elsewhere on the Pacific plate, only discontinuous seamount tracks formed prior to 80 Ma2–7 are documented. Currently, models require ~1,200 km of latitudinal motion to link the Louisville plume to the OJP-Nui1, yet paleolatitude estimates from ~70 Ma to today remain within error of its present location8,9 suggesting that any significant Louisville plume motion occurred earlier. Here, through a combination of geochemistry and geochronology9–14, we demonstrate that Samoa and Rurutu-Arago are the longest-lived Pacific hotspots, traceable to >120 Ma before subducting into the Mariana Trench. These newly-defined tracks better constrain plate rotation between 80-100 Ma, allowing us to update Pacific absolute plate motion models, and link the Louisville volcanic track to OJP-Nui without requiring major plume motion.
创建时间:
2025-03-19



