The origin of the Musicians Seamount Province and its inferences for Late Cretaceous Pacific Plate Motion
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The origin of the Musicians Seamount Province and its inferences for Late Cretaceous Pacific Plate Motion

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  • Journal Title:
    Marine Geology
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  • Description:
    Linear chains of seamounts, sourced from mantle plume processes, have the potential to refine plate motion models because the hotspot remains fixed relative to the moving lithospheric plate. However, to define plate motion, consistent seamount age progression and geometry are required. Some seamount chains, such as the Musician Seamount Province (MSP), have complex geometries and age distributions, which complicates calibrating plate motion. The MSP resides northwest of the Hawaiian Islands and is composed of seamounts and volcanic elongated ridges (VERs) that cover ∼420,000 km2 of Pacific seafloor. Here we provide new 40Ar/39Ar age determinations for a series of lava flows recovered from the MSP during expedition EX1708 of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Ocean Exploration program. The MSP was built by four distinct volcanic processes: (1) age-progressive hotspot volcanism associated with the Euterpe Plume (ca. 98–79 Ma). (2) VER formation from plume-ridge channelization (ca. 97–94 Ma; 86–79 Ma) where the VERs only form when the hotspot is within ∼600 km of the ridge. (3) Eocene volcanism driven by extension during the ca. 50 Ma change in Pacific rotation poles (ca. 54–47 Ma). (4) Some near-ridge shear-driven upwelling or diffuse extensional volcanism that preceded the southern MSP lithosphere overriding the plume (ca. 86–84 Ma). By filtering lava flows with only robust statistically concordant 40Ar/39Ar age determinations as well as geologic setting, we develop a dataset of samples valuable for constraining Pacific plate motion. A local plate velocity of 42 ± 9 km/Ma for the 98–81 Ma time frame is calculated. Furthermore, the seamount track indicates that large shifts in Pacific rotation pole locations are required prior to 98 Ma and at ca. 81 Ma.
  • Source:
    Marine Geology, 465, 107166
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  • ISSN:
    0025-3227
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    CC BY-NC
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    Submitted
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