Crispini, Laura et al. (2006): Microstructural features of a subaqueous lava from basaltic crust off the East Pacific Rise (ODP Site 1256, Cocos Plate)

Leg/Site/Hole:
IODP 309
IODP 312
ODP 206
ODP 206 1256
IODP 309 U1256
IODP 312 U1256
Identifier:
2007-044718
georefid

Creator:
Crispini, Laura
Universita di Genova, Dipartimento per lo Studio del Territorio e delle sue Risorse, Genoa, Italy
author

Tartarotti, Paola
Universita di Parma, Italy
author

Umino, Susumu
Universita di Milano, Italy
author

Identification:
Microstructural features of a subaqueous lava from basaltic crust off the East Pacific Rise (ODP Site 1256, Cocos Plate)
2006
In: Spadea, Piera (editor), Montanini, Alessandra (editor), Modern and fossil oceanic lithosphere
Pitagora Editrice, Bologna, Italy
31
2
117-127
This work examines a massive basaltic lava emplaced in a subaqueous environment and drilled at ODP Site 1256. Site 1256 was drilled on the eastern flank of the East Pacific Rise during ODP Leg 206 (6 degrees 44N, 91 degrees 56W; Guatemala Basin), located in 15 Ma old oceanic crust created by superfast seafloor spreading (ca. 220 mm/yr). The massive lava lies between thin sheet flows and caps pillow lavas, sheet flows with minor hyaloclastite, breccia and dikes. The massive basalt was encountered in two holes, 1256C and 1256D, which are 30 m apart, and has a thickness of 35 m in Hole 1256C and 75 m in Hole 1256D. It can be interpreted as a ponded lava, originated by rapidly erupted lava accumulated in a off axis >3-5 km depression of a steep paleotopography (Teagle et al., 2004). The Hole 1256 lava pond has been divided into distinct petrographic units and structural units. Five main structural units with different key flow-related textures and syn-magmatic or late magmatic structures were recognized. Ductile and brittle-ductile structures attributed to the flow gives constraints about the emplacement mechanism of the lava and possibly seafloor topography. Unusual textural features related to the flow kinematics were recognized mainly in the top and in the bottom parts of the lava pond, whereas brittle-ductile and brittle deformations occur throughout the whole ponded body. Microstructures in the base may be interpreted as flow-related deformation of hot ductile coalesced spatter clasts erupted during the first stages of emplacement. Alternatively, they may have been formed during lava drain-back, in the final emplacement stages.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:13.0000
West:-103.0000East: -86.0000
South:3.0000

Igneous and metamorphic petrology; basalts; Cocos Plate; cores; crust; deformation; East Pacific; East Pacific Rise; electron probe data; emplacement; eruptions; Expedition 309; Expedition 312; Guatemala Basin; hyaloclastite; igneous rocks; Integrated Ocean Drilling Program; lava flows; lava ponds; Leg 206; mid-ocean ridges; North Pacific; Northeast Pacific; Ocean Drilling Program; ocean floors; oceanic crust; ODP Site 1256; ophiolite; Pacific Ocean; paleorelief; plate tectonics; pyroclastics; recrystallization; sea-floor spreading; SEM data; spreading centers; volcanic features; volcanic rocks; volcanic structures; volcanism;

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