Deborah K. Smith
University of Leeds
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Nature | 2008
Javier E. Escartin; Deborah K. Smith; Johnson R. Cann; Hans A. Schouten; Charles H. Langmuir; S. Escrig
The formation of oceanic detachment faults is well established from inactive, corrugated fault planes exposed on sea floor formed along ridges spreading at less than 80u2009kmu2009Myr–1 (refs 1–4). These faults can accommodate extension for up to 1–3u2009Myr (ref. 5), and are associated with one of the two contrasting modes of accretion operating along the northern Mid-Atlantic Ridge. The first mode is asymmetrical accretion involving an active detachment fault along one ridge flank. The second mode is the well-known symmetrical accretion, dominated by magmatic processes with subsidiary high-angle faulting and the formation of abyssal hills on both flanks. Here we present an examination of ∼2,500u2009km of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge between 12.5 and 35°u2009N, which reveals asymmetrical accretion along almost half of the ridge. Hydrothermal activity identified so far in the study region is closely associated with asymmetrical accretion, which also shows high levels of near-continuous hydroacoustically and teleseismically recorded seismicity. Increased seismicity is probably generated along detachment faults that accommodate a sizeable proportion of the total plate separation. In contrast, symmetrical segments have lower levels of seismicity, which occurs primarily at segment ends. Basalts erupted along asymmetrical segments have compositions that are consistent with crystallization at higher pressures than basalts from symmetrical segments, and with lower extents of partial melting of the mantle. Both seismic evidence and geochemical evidence indicate that the axial lithosphere is thicker and colder at asymmetrical sections of the ridge, either because associated hydrothermal circulation efficiently penetrates to greater depths or because the rising mantle is cooler. We suggest that much of the variability in sea-floor morphology, seismicity and basalt chemistry found along slow-spreading ridges can be thus attributed to the frequent involvement of detachment faults in oceanic lithospheric accretion.
Archive | 2009
Hugo F. Schouten; Deborah K. Smith; Wenlu Zhu; Laurent G. J. Montési; Grant Mitchell; Johnson R. Cann
Archive | 2009
Deborah K. Smith; Hugo F. Schouten; Johnson R. Cann; Wenlu Zhu; Laurent G. J. Montési; Grant Mitchell
Archive | 2008
Laurent G. J. Montési; Wenlu Zhu; Grant Mitchell; Hugo F. Schouten; Deborah K. Smith; Emily M. Klein
Archive | 2008
Johnson R. Cann; Deborah K. Smith; J. Escartin; Hugo F. Schouten
Archive | 2007
J. Escartin; Deborah K. Smith; Hugo F. Schouten; J. Cannat
Archive | 2007
Johnson R. Cann; J. Escartin; Deborah K. Smith; Hugo F. Schouten
Archive | 2006
Deborah K. Smith; Hugo F. Schouten; Emily M. Klein
Archive | 2006
Johnson R. Cann; Deborah K. Smith; J. Escartin
Archive | 2006
Hugo F. Schouten; Deborah K. Smith