Galapagos Tectonics and Evolution (Invited)
Abstract
Galapagos is now considered one of the type-examples of hotspot-ridge interaction, although in the early years of plate tectonics it was generally thought that this interpretation was demonstrably wrong, with two influential groups insisting that non-hotspot models were required for this area. The key to understanding Galapagos tectonic evolution was the recognition that small ridge axis jumps toward the hotspot had occurred, producing complicated magnetic anomalies and asymmetric lithospheric accretion. My dissertation work, guided by Jason Morgan, showed that this simple modification to plate tectonic theory could resolve the seemingly compelling geometric arguments against the Cocos and Carnegie aseismic ridges being Galapagos hotspot tracks, and further that if Galapagos were a hotspot near Fernandina, fixed with respect to the Hawaii hotspot, there should be aseismic ridges on the Cocos and Nazca plates with the observed Cocos and Carnegie ridge geometry, both aseismic ridges forming when the hotspot was ridge-centered, but only the Carnegie ridge since the plate boundary migrated north of the hotspot. A great deal of subsequent research has shown that some areas are considerably more complicated than originally thought, but the following basic model still appears to hold. The Farallon plate split apart along the Grijalva scarp, possibly a preexisting Pacific-Farallon FZ that intersected the hotspot at this time (although alternative interpretations exist), probably in response to tensional stress caused by slab pull in different directions at the Mid-America and Peru-Chile trenches. This break-up allowed more orthogonal subduction of independent Cocos and Nazca plates beginning shortly after 25 Ma. The original Cocos-Nazca ridge trended E-NE, but soon reorganized into N-S spreading segments. The subsequent evolution involved substantial northward ridge migration and ridge jumps, mostly toward the Galapagos hotspot. Recent ridge jumps have occurred in systematic patterns as a result of new rifts almost always propagating “downhill” away from the hotspot, as shown by the characteristic patterns of pseudofaults, failed rifts (sometimes grabens, sometimes abandoned ridges), and zones of transferred lithosphere, with Galapagos 95.5W the type-example propagator. These propagators are probably driven by gravity sliding stresses due to the shallow lithosphere near the hotspot (although alternative interpretations exist). The origin of many propagation sequences appears to involve discrete southward jumps forming new segments near the hotspot. The observed petrological and geochemical variations are interpreted as consistent with mantle plume and propagating rift effects. However, the speculation of Schilling et al. (1982) that, in analogy to Iceland (the other type-example of hotspot-ridge interaction), Galapagos might be a pulsing plume, and that plume pulses might drive the Galapagos propagators, hasn’t received much support. It is interesting that the Galapagos and Iceland hotspots have produced such apparently different effects along the ridge segments they so obviously strongly influence.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2010
- Bibcode:
- 2010AGUFM.V52A..01H
- Keywords:
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- 3035 MARINE GEOLOGY AND GEOPHYSICS / Midocean ridge processes;
- 3037 MARINE GEOLOGY AND GEOPHYSICS / Oceanic hotspots and intraplate volcanism;
- 3040 MARINE GEOLOGY AND GEOPHYSICS / Plate tectonics;
- 3075 MARINE GEOLOGY AND GEOPHYSICS / Submarine tectonics and volcanism