Weis, D. et al. (1991): Ninetyeast Ridge (Indian Ocean); a 5000 km record of a Dupal mantle plume

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 121
ODP 121 756
ODP 121 757
ODP 121 758
Identifier:
1991-011326
georefid

10.1130/0091-7613(1991)019<0099:NRIOAK>2.3.CO;2
doi

Creator:
Weis, D.
Univ. Libre Bruxelles, Lab. Assoc. Geol.-Petrol.-Geochronol., Brussels, Belgium
author

Frey, F. A.
Mass. Inst. Technol., United States
author

Saunders, A.
Univ. Leicester, United Kingdom
author

Gibson, I. L.
Univ. Waterloo, Canada
author

Dehn, Jonathan
Ruhr Univ., Federal Republic of Germany
author

Driscoll, Neal
Lamont Doherty Geol. Obs., United States
author

Farrell, John
Brown Univ., United States
author

Fourtanier, Elisabeth
Ec. Norm. Super., France
author

Gamson, Paul D.
Scripps Inst. Oceanogr., United States
author

Gee, Jeffrey S.
Aust. Bur. Miner. Resour., Australia
author

Janacek, Thomas
Univ. Houston, United States
author

Klootwijk, Chris
Nucl. Res. Cent., Federal Republic of Germany
author

Lawrence, James R.
GECO Geophys. Co., United States
author

Littke, Ralf
Shimane Univ., Japan
author

Newman, Jerry S.
Univ. Mich., United States
author

Nomura, Ritsuo
Petro Canada, Canada
author

Owen, Robert M.
Fla. State Univ., United States
author

Peirce, John
Univ. Nebr., United States
author

Popsichal, James J.
Free Univ., Netherlands
author

Rea, David K.
St. Louis Univ., United States
author

Resiwati, Purtyasti
Univ. Tokyo, Japan
author

Smit, Jan
author

Smith, Guy M.
author

Tamaki, Kensaku
author

Taylor, Elliott
author

Weissel, Jeffrey K.
author

Wilkinson, Craig
author

Identification:
Ninetyeast Ridge (Indian Ocean); a 5000 km record of a Dupal mantle plume
1991
Geology (Boulder)
Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
19
2
99-102
Data and observation from Drifting Program Leg 121 and plate-tectonic reconstructions indicate that the Ninetyeast Ridge (Indian Ocean) was derived from the interaction of a deep-seated Dupal hotspot and a nearby spreading-ridge axis. The 5000-km-long ridge, from lat 34 degrees S to Rat 10 degrees N, was drilled at three sites during Leg 121. About 178 m of basalt, >38 to >80 Ma, were recovered from a total penetration of approximately 310 m. Shipboard petrographic and geochemical studies showed that each site has distinctive characteristics. Most of the cored lavas have a tholeiitic basalt composition. Incompatible-element abundanes and ratios show systematic trends, consistent with an origin for the Ninetyeast Ridge lavas by mixing between a depleted component-Indian Ocean mid-ocean ridge basalt-and an enriched component-oceanic-island basalt similar to that observed in the youngest alkalic basalts from the Kerguelen archipelago. Preliminary shore-based trace element abundance and isotopic data are compatible with this hypothesis, although Pb isotopes indicate the involvement of another component.The long-lasting and more or less continuous activity of the Kerguelen-Heard plume (ca. 115 Ma), now located under Heard Island, south of the Southeast Indian Ridge, provides evidence that the source of the Dupal anomaly is deep seated.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:8.0000
West:85.0000East: 92.0000
South:-35.0000

Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments; Igneous and metamorphic petrology; Solid-earth geophysics; basalts; cores; Dupal anomalies; geochemistry; Heard Island; hot spots; igneous rocks; Indian Ocean; Indian Ocean Islands; isotopes; Kerguelen-Heard Plume; lava; lead; Leg 121; mantle; mantle plumes; metals; mid-ocean ridge basalts; mid-ocean ridges; mixing; Nd-144/Nd-143; neodymium; Ninetyeast Ridge; Ocean Drilling Program; ocean-island basalts; ODP Site 756; ODP Site 757; ODP Site 758; rare earths; ratios; spectra; stable isotopes; tectonophysics; trace elements; volcanic rocks; X-ray fluorescence spectra;

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