Drainage, topographic, and gravity anomalies in the Lake Superior Region: Evidence for a 1100 Ma mantle plume
Abstract
A topographic dome, radial drainage pattern, and regional negative gravity anomaly, all centered on Lake Superior, are vestiges of a 1100 Ma mantle plume that formed the Midcontinent Rift System of central North America. The topographic and gravimetric relations suggest that the dome is maintained isostatically by fundamental changes imprinted on the lithosphere by the plume, including magmatic underplating of the crust and depletion of the upper mantle. These changes occurred at distances of up to 500 km or more from the center of the plume, well beyond the margins of the rift.
- Publication:
-
Geophysical Research Letters
- Pub Date:
- November 1992
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 1992GeoRL..19.2119A
- Keywords:
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- Domes (Geology);
- Drainage Patterns;
- Earth Mantle;
- Gravity Anomalies;
- Plumes;
- Topography;
- Isostasy;
- Lake Superior;
- Lithosphere;
- Tectonics;
- Geodesy and Gravity: Regional and global gravity anomalies and earth structure;
- Information Related to Geographic Region: North America;
- Information Related to Geologic Time: Precambrian;
- Exploration Geophysics: Gravity methods