Krishna, K. S. et al. (1999): Paleocene on-spreading-axis hotspot volcanism along the Ninetyeast Ridge; an interaction between the Kerguelen hotspot and the Wharton spreading center

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 121
ODP 179
DSDP 22
DSDP 22 214
ODP 121 756
ODP 121 757
ODP 121 758
Identifier:
2000-043836
georefid

Creator:
Krishna, K. S.
National Institute of Oceanography, Goa, India
author

Gopala Rao, D.
Yuzhmorgeologia, Russian Federation
author

Subba Raju, L. V.
Andhra University, India
author

Chaubey, A. K.
author

Shcherbakov, V. S.
author

Pilipenko, A. I.
author

Radhakrishna Murthy, I. V.
author

Identification:
Paleocene on-spreading-axis hotspot volcanism along the Ninetyeast Ridge; an interaction between the Kerguelen hotspot and the Wharton spreading center
1999
Proceedings of the Indian Academy of Sciences: Earth and Planetary Sciences
Indian Academy of Sciences, Bangalore, India
108
4
255-267
Investigations of three plausible tectonic settings of the Kerguelen hotspot relative to the Wharton spreading center evoke the on-spreading-axis hotspot volcanism of Paleocene (60-54 Ma) age along the Ninetyeast Ridge. The hypothesis is consistent with magnetic lineations and abandoned spreading centers of the eastern Indian Ocean and seismic structure and radiometric dates of the Ninetyeast Ridge. Furthermore, it is supported by the occurrence of oceanic andesites at Deep Sea Drilling Project (DSDP) Site 214, isotopically heterogeneous basalts at Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Site 757 of approximately the same age (59-58 Ma) at both sites. Intermix basalts generated by plume-mid-ocean ridge (MOR) interaction, exist between 11 degrees and 17 degrees S along the Ninetyeast Ridge. A comparison of age profile along the Ninetyeast Ridge between ODP Sites 758 (82 Ma) and 756 (43 Ma) with similarly aged oceanic crust in the Central Indian Basin and Wharton Basin reveals the existence of extra oceanic crust spanning 11 degrees latitude beneath the Ninetyeast Ridge. The extra crust is attributed to the transfer of lithospheric blocks from the Antarctic plate to the Indian plate through a series of southward ridge jumps at about 65, 54 and 42 Ma. Emplacement of volcanic rocks on the extra crust resulted from rapid northward motion (absolute) of the Indian plate. The Ninetyeast Ridge was originated when the spreading centers of the Wharton Ridge were absolutely moving northward with respect to a relatively stationary Kerguelen hotspot with multiple southward ridge jumps. In the process, the spreading center coincided with the Kerguelen hotspot and took place on-spreading-axis volcanism along the Ninetyeast Ridge.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:-10.0000
West:83.0000East: 91.0000
South:-21.0000

Solid-earth geophysics; andesites; Cenozoic; Deep Sea Drilling Project; DSDP Site 214; hot spots; igneous rocks; Indian Ocean; Kerguelen Hot Spot; Leg 121; Leg 179; Leg 22; magnetic anomalies; mantle; mantle plumes; Ninetyeast Ridge; Ocean Drilling Program; ocean floors; ODP Site 756; ODP Site 757; ODP Site 758; Paleocene; Paleogene; plate tectonics; sea-floor spreading; spreading centers; Tertiary; volcanic rocks; Wharton spreading center;

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