Herzer, R. H. et al. (1989): The Urry Knolls, late Neogene alkaline basalt extrusives, southwestern Chatham Rise

Leg/Site/Hole:
DSDP 90
DSDP 90 594
Identifier:
1989-063348
georefid

Creator:
Herzer, R. H.
N.Z. Geol. Surv., Lower Hutt, New Zealand
author

Challis, G. A.
author

Christie, R. H. K.
author

Scott, G. H.
author

Watters, W. A.
author

Identification:
The Urry Knolls, late Neogene alkaline basalt extrusives, southwestern Chatham Rise
1989
Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand
Royal Society of New Zealand, Wellington, New Zealand
19
2
181-193
A little studied group of submarine volcanoes, the Urry Knolls, lies on the southern flank of Chatham Rise some 200 km ESE of Banks Peninsula, South Island. Individually, the volcanoes form small cones a few kilometres across and several hundred metres high. Some straddle small ridges, implying eruption from fissures. Buried lava flows or shallow intrusions are common. Vesicular olivine basalts dredged from one of the peaks are hawaiites of "within-plate alkaline" and "ocean-island alkaline" affinities, and similar in mineralogy and chemistry to basalts from Chatham Island and Banks Peninsula. They may have been active as early as upper Late Miocene time and as late as Mangapanian to basal Castlecliffian (latest Pliocene-early Pleistocene) time.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:-43.0000
West:174.3000East: 174.5653
South:-45.3129

Igneous and metamorphic petrology; alkali basalts; basalts; Castlecliffian; Cenozoic; Chatham Rise; Deep Sea Drilling Project; DSDP Site 594; genesis; hawaiite; igneous rocks; IPOD; Leg 90; Mangapanian; Neogene; olivine basalt; Pacific Ocean; petrology; Pleistocene; Quaternary; South Pacific; Tertiary; Urry Knolls; volcanic rocks;

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