Abstract:
Cores recovered on Deep Sea Drilling Program leg 43 and on Bermuda itself, together with geophysical data (anomalies in basement depth, geoid, and heatflow) and modeling have long suggested that the uplift forming the Bermuda Rise, as well as the initial igneous activity that produced the Bermuda volcanoes, began ca. 47-40 Ma, during the early to middle part of the Middle Eocene. Some authors attribute 65 Ma igneous activity in Mississippi and 115 Ma activity in Kansas to a putative "Bermuda hotspot" or plume fixed in the mantle below a moving North America plate. While this is more or less consistent with hotspot traces computed from "absolute motion" models, the hotspot or plume must resemble a blob in a lava lamp that is turned off for up to 25 million years at a time, and/or be heavily influenced by lithosphere structure. Moreover, Cretaceous igneous activity in Texas and Eocene intrusions in Virginia then require separate mantle "blobs". The pillow lavas forming the original Bermuda shield volcano have not been reliably dated, and the three associated smaller edifices have not been drilled or dated. A well-dated (ca. 33-34 Ma) episode of unusually titaniferous sheet intrusion in the Bermuda edifice was either triggered by platewide stress changes or reflects local volcanogenic events deep in the mantle source region. The high Ti and Fe of the Bermuda intrusive sheets probably relate to the very high-amplitude magnetic anomalies discovered on the islands. Numerical models constrained by available geophysical data attribute the Bermuda Rise to some combination of lithospheric reheating and dynamic uplift. While the relative contributions of these two processes cannot yet be wholly separated, three features of the rise clearly distinguish it from the Hawaiian swell: (1) the Bermuda Rise is elongated at right angles to the direction of plate motion; (2) there has been little or no subsidence of the rise and the volcanic edifice since its formation-in fact, rise uplift continued at the same site from the late Middle Eocene into the Miocene; and (3) the Bermuda Rise lacks a clear, age-progressive chain. We infer that the Bermuda Rise and other Atlantic midplate rises are supported by anomalous asthenosphere, upwelling or not, that penetrates the thermal boundary layer and travels with the overlying plate. The elongation along crustal isochrons of both the Bermuda volcanoes and the Bermuda Rise and rise development mostly within a belt of rougher, thinner crust and seismically "slower" upper mantle-implying retention of gabbroic melts at the ancient Mid-Atlantic Ridge axis-suggest that the mantle lithosphere may have helped localize rise development, in contradiction to plume models. The Bermuda Rise area is seismically more active than its oceanic surroundings, preferentially along old transform traces, possibly reflecting a weaker upper mantle lithosphere. We attribute the "Bermuda event" to a global plate kinematic reorganization triggered by the closing of the Tethys and/or the associated gravitational collapse into the lower mantle of subducted slabs that had been temporarily stagnant near the 660 km mantle discontinuity. The widespread onset of sinking slabs required simultaneous up-welling for mass balance. In addition, the global plate kinematic reorganization was accompanied by increased stress in some plate interiors, favoring magma ascent along fractures at structurally weak sites. We suggest that the Bermuda event and concomitant igneous activity in Virginia, West Antarctica, Africa, and other regions were among such upwellings, but structurally influenced by the lithosphere, and probably originated in the upper mantle. Drilling a transect of boreholes across and along the Bermuda Rise to elucidate turbidite offlap during rise formation might discriminate between a widely distributed mantle source (such as a previously subducted slab) and a narrow plume whose head (or melt root) spreads out quasiradially over time, generating an upward and outward expanding swell.