no plume beneath iceland

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No Plume Beneath Iceland. talk given at the Colorado School of Mines, 2nd March 2006 Gillian R. Foulger Durham University, U.K. Evidence in support of a plume beneath Iceland. History of magmatism Uplift High temperatures Crustal structure Mantle structure. DISKO. FAROES & E GREENLAND. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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1

No Plume Beneath Iceland

talk given at the Colorado School of Mines, 2nd March 2006

Gillian R. Foulger

Durham University, U.K.

2

Evidence in support of a plume beneath Iceland

1. History of magmatism

2. Uplift

3. High temperatures

4. Crustal structure

5. Mantle structure

3

1. History of magmatism

ODP158

DISKO

BRITISHPROVINCE

FAROES &E GREENLAND

61-59 Ma 54 MaJones (2005)

4

1. History ofmagmatism:Iceland

• Formed over the last 54 Million years

• Thick crust

5

2. Uplift

0-200 m0 - 200 m

500-800 m

400-900 m 420-620 m

180-425 m

0-100 m

380-590 m

Jones (2005)

6

2. Uplift

0-200 m0 - 200 m

500-800 m

400-900 m 420-620 m

180-425 m

0-100 m

380-590 m

• Uplift rapid• Approached

1 km in some places

Jones (2005)

7

3. High-temperatures

~ 100 K temperature anomaly for Iceland relative to MORBArndt (2005)

8

4. Crustal structure

Crustal structure from receiver functionsFoulger et al. (2003)

9

5. Mantle structure

Bijwaard & Spakman (1999)

Whole-mantle tomography: A plume from the core-mantle boundary.

10

The Iceland plume?

A slam dunk!

11

Let us look in detail, to find out more about what the Iceland

plume is like.

12

Seismological studies of Iceland

Foulger et al. (2003)

13

Crustal structure

• Variations in crustal thickness should be parallel to spreading direction

• Crust should be thickest in the west, behind the plume

Foulger et al. (2003)

14

Crustal structure

The melting anomaly has always been centred on the mid-Atlantic ridge

15

Iceland: Mantle tomography

• Over 2,000,000 data

– S-wave arrival times (S, SS, SSS, ScS & SKS)

– fundamental- & higher-mode Rayleigh-wave phase velocities

– normal-mode frequencies

• Probably best spherical harmonic model for the transition zone & mid-mantle

Ritsema et al. (1999)

16

Whole-mantle tomography

Bijwaard & Spakman (1999)

Hudson Bay plume?

17

Transition zone discontinuities

Predicted topography on the 410-km and

650-km discontinuitiesDu et al. (2006)

18

Transition zone discontinuities

• 410 warps down by 15 km

• 650 flat

• No evidence for anomalous structure or physical conditions at 650 km beneath Iceland

Du et al. (2006)

19

Temperature

Can be investigated using:

• Petrology • Seismology• Modeling bathymetry• Modeling vertical motion• Heat flow

20

Petrological temperature

~ 100 K temperature anomaly for Iceland relative to MORBArndt (2005)

21

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MgO (wt%)

MgO (wt%)

MgO (wt%)

MgO (wt%)

MORBIcelandic basalt glassesReykjanes Peninsulaand TheistareykirKistufell (Breddam 2002)Puna Ridge(Clague et al. 1995)Gudfinnsson et al. (2003)

Hawaii 1570˚

MORs 1280-1400˚

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8101214161820

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MgO (wt%)

MgO (wt%)

MgO (wt%)

MgO (wt%)

MORBIcelandic basalt glassesReykjanes Peninsulaand TheistareykirKistufell (Breddam 2002)Puna Ridge(Clague et al. 1995)Petrological temperature

Iceland??

22

Temperature: Seismology

Iceland

Ritsema & Montagner (2003)

T ~ 200˚C

T ~ 100˚C

Vertical scalex 10

Vertical scale x 1

Vs

23

Temperature: Iceland

Foulger et al. (2005)

24

Uplift: Magnitude & Duration

• 61 Ma uplift associated with British igneous activity variable, low amplitude (few 100 m) & localised.

• 54 Ma uplift associated with igneous activity distant from proposed plume, high amplitude (up to 1 km) & widespread.

• Time between onset and peak uplift for both igneous phases probably << 1 Myr.

• Uplift history complex & not satisfactorily explained by any single published model.

25

1. History of magmatism

ODP158

DISKO

BRITISHPROVINCE

FAROES &E GREENLAND

61-59 Ma 54 MaJones (2005)

26

Summary

• Variations in crustal thickness inconsistent with plume predictions

• Mantle anomaly confined to upper mantle

• No reliable evidence for plume-like temperatures

• Uplift history complex and not well explained

• Distribution of magmatism inconsistent with plume predictions

27

An alternative model

Plate tectonic processes (“PLATE”)

• Two elements:– Variable source fertility – Extensional stress

A cool, shallow, top-driven model

28

• Mid-ocean ridges (1/3 of all “hot spots”)

• Many others intraplate extensional areas

PLATE: Lithospheric extension

29 Peacock (2000)

PLATE: Variable mantle fertility

• Possible sources:– recycling of subducted slabs in upper mantle

30

QuickTime™ and aGIF decompressorare needed to see this picture.

Schott et al. (2000)

PLATE: Variable mantle fertility

• Possible sources:– delamination of continental lithosphere

31Cordery et al. (1997)

The liquidus & solidus of subducted crust are lower than peridotite

• Subducted crust transforms to eclogite at depth

• Eclogite is extensively molten at the peridotite solidus

Pyrolite

Eclogite

32

Geochemistry of “hot spot” lavas

• Can be modeled as fractional melting of MORB

• Ocean Island Basalt (OIB) comes from recycled near-surface materials e.g., subducted oceanic crust

Hofmann & White (1982)

33

Iceland

34

Iceland: Extension

Jones (2005)

Iceland has been persistently centred on the mid-Atlantic ridge

35

Iceland: Mantle fertility

• Relationship to the Caledonian suture

• Recycled Iapetus crust in source?

• Can remelting of Iapetus slabs account for the excess melt, geochemistry & petrology?

Closure of

Iapetus

36

Melt fraction : Temperature

A 30/70 eclogite-peridotite mixture can generate several times as much melt as peridotite

Yaxley (2000)

37

Geochemical evidence for crustal recycling

• Recent papers: Korenaga & Keleman (2000); Breddam (2002); Chauvel & Hemond (2000)

• Estimated primary mantle melt from Iceland, E & SE Greenland shows source mantle enriched in Fe; Mg# is as low as 0.87

• Heterogeneity suggests MORB mantle also involved

• Sr-Nd-Hf-Pb isotopes & O18 suggest recycling of subducted, aged oceanic crust, ± sub-arc magmatism, ± sediments

38

Iceland: REE patterns

Iceland REE can be modeled by extensive melting of subducted crust + small amount of alkali olivine basalt

Foulger et al. (2005)

39

The alternative hypothesis is...

• Iceland is a “normal” part of the MAR where excess melt is produced from remelting Iapetus slabs

• However, the amount of melt produced by isentropic upwelling of eclogite cannot at present be calculated

40

Tectonics & crustal structure

Foulger et al. (2003)

Iceland is also a region of local, persistent tectonic instability

41

Iceland: Tectonic evolution

Foulger (in press)

42

Iceland: Tectonic evolution

Foulger (2002)

43

Crustal structure

The thickspot beneath Iceland may be a submerged oceanic microplate

44

Iceland: The mantle anomaly

• Can be explained by 0.1% partial melt– a more fusible mantle composition

– CO2 fluxing

• Could simply be a place where the low-velocity zone is thicker

Iceland

45

Summary

1. Superficially, several observations are consistent with plume theory

2. Closer examination virtually never fulfills the predictions of plume theory

46

Summary

3. 2 approaches:1. adapt plume theory to fit

2. accept that plume theory fails and boldly go where no man has gone before

47

Resources:http://www.mantleplumes.org/

48

That’s all folks

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