Asymmetric melt sills and upper crustal construction beneath overlapping ridge segments: Implications for the development of melt sills and ridge crests
- C.H. Tong*1,
- J.W. Pye*1,
- P.J. Barton*1,
- R.S. White*1,
- M.C. Sinha*1,
- S.C. Singh*1,
- R.W. Hobbs*1,
- S. Bazin*2,
- A.J. Harding*2,
- G.M. Kent*2 and
- J.A. Orcutt*2
- 1Bullard Laboratories, Department of Earth Sciences, University of Cambridge, Madingley Road, Cambridge CB3 0EZ, UK
- 2Cecil and Ida M. Green Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego, California 92093, USA
Abstract
A new three-dimensional tomographic velocity model and depth-converted reflection images of the melt sills beneath the 9°03′N overlapping spreading center on the East Pacific Rise show that the upper crustal construction at this ridge discontinuity is highly asymmetric with reference to the bathymetric ridge crests of the overlapping limbs. Despite the similarly curved ridge crests, the asymmetries are markedly different under the two limbs and appear to be related to the contrasting evolutionary history of the limbs. The overlap basin is closely related to the propagating eastern limb in terms of its seismic structure. By contrast, the western limb forms a distinct morphologic region that displays little structural relationship to the adjacent overlap basin and other relict basins. As the overlapping spreading center is migrating southward, the differential development of melt sills and ridge crests may be inferred from the results of this study. Ridge propagation appears to involve two major processes: the advancement of the melt sill at the ridge tip and the development of ridge-crest morphology and the neovolcanic axis to the north of the overlap basin region near the existing propagating limb. The latter process may result in the abandonment of the current neovolcanic axis, leading to the self-decapitation of the propagating limb. By contrast, the self-decapitation of the western limb is related to the receding melt sill, which lags behind the anticlockwise rotational motion of the ridge crest.
Footnotes
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↵Present addresses: Tong—T.H. Huxley School, Imperial College of Science, Technology and Medicine, Prince Consort Road, London SW7 2BP, UK.ch.tongic.ac.uk. Sinha—School of Ocean and Earth Science, University of Southampton, Southampton SO14 3ZH, UK. Singh and Bazin—Laboratoire de Géosciences Marines, Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris, 75252 Paris Cedex 05, France.
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- Accepted October 1, 2001.
- Received June 18, 2001.
- Revision received September 20, 2001.
- Geological Society of America












