Artículo de revista
Crustal intrusion beneath the Louisville hotspot track
Fecha
2010Registro en:
Earth and Planetary Science Letters 289 (2010) 323–333
doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2009.11.020
Autor
Contreras Reyes, Eduardo
Grevemeyer, I.
Watts, A. B.
Planert, L.
Flueh, E. R.
Peirce, C.
Institución
Resumen
We report here the first detailed 2D tomographic image of the crust and upper mantle structure of a
Cretaceous seamount that formed during the interaction of the Pacific plate and the Louisville hotspot.
Results show that at ∼1.5 km beneath the seamount summit, the core of the volcanic edifice appears to be
dominantly intrusive, with velocities faster than 6.5 km/s. The edifice overlies both high lower crustal (N7.2–
7.6 km/s) and upper mantle (N8.3 km/s) velocities, suggesting that ultramafic rocks have been intruded as
sills rather than underplated beneath the crust. The results suggest that the ratio between the volume of
intra-crustal magmatic intrusion and extrusive volcanism is as high as ∼4.5. In addition, the inversion of
Moho reflections shows that the Pacific oceanic crust has been flexed downward by up to ∼2.5 km beneath
the seamount. The flexure can be explained by an elastic plate model in which the seamount emplaced upon
oceanic lithosphere that was ∼10 Myr at the time of loading. Intra-crustal magmatic intrusion may be a
feature of hotspot volcanism at young, hot, oceanic lithosphere, whereas, magmatic underplating below a
pre-existing Moho may be more likely to occur where a hotspot interacts with oceanic lithosphere that is
several tens of millions of years old.