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NARROW
GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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Africa
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East Africa
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Afar Depression (1)
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Ethiopia (1)
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Ethiopian Rift (1)
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East African Rift (1)
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Arctic region
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Greenland (1)
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Asia
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Far East
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China
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Sichuan China (1)
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Yunnan China (1)
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Atlantic Ocean
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North Atlantic (1)
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Atlantic Ocean Islands
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Faeroe Islands (1)
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Espanola Basin (1)
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North America
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Appalachians
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Valley and Ridge Province (1)
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Rio Grande Rift (3)
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polar regions (1)
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United States
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Colorado (1)
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New Mexico (1)
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Virginia (1)
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Western U.S. (1)
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elements, isotopes
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metals
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rare earths (1)
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geochronology methods
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fission-track dating (1)
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geologic age
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Paleozoic
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Permian
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Capitanian (1)
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igneous rocks
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igneous rocks
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volcanic rocks
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adakites (1)
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basalts
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mid-ocean ridge basalts (1)
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minerals
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phosphates
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apatite (1)
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Primary terms
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Africa
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East Africa
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Afar Depression (1)
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Ethiopia (1)
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Ethiopian Rift (1)
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East African Rift (1)
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Arctic region
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Greenland (1)
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Asia
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Far East
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China
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Sichuan China (1)
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Yunnan China (1)
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Atlantic Ocean
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North Atlantic (1)
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Atlantic Ocean Islands
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Faeroe Islands (1)
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Cenozoic
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Quaternary (1)
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Tertiary
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Neogene
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crust (4)
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geochronology (1)
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geodesy (2)
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igneous rocks
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volcanic rocks
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adakites (1)
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basalts
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mid-ocean ridge basalts (1)
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intrusions (3)
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mantle (6)
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metals
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North America
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Appalachians
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Valley and Ridge Province (1)
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Rio Grande Rift (3)
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ocean basins (1)
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ocean floors (1)
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paleoecology (1)
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paleogeography (1)
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Paleozoic
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Permian
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Guadalupian
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Capitanian (1)
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plate tectonics (10)
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sedimentation (1)
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seismology (1)
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tectonics (5)
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United States
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Albuquerque Basin (1)
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Colorado (1)
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Eastern U.S.
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Southeastern U.S. (1)
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New Mexico (1)
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Southwestern U.S. (1)
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Virginia (1)
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Western U.S. (1)
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rock formations
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Emeishan Basalts (1)
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Surface-wave tomography of the Emeishan large igneous province (China): Magma storage system, hidden hotspot track, and its impact on the Capitanian mass extinction
Tectonic subsidence, geoid analysis, and the Miocene-Pliocene unconformity in the Rio Grande rift, southwestern United States: Implications for mantle upwelling as a driving force for rift opening
Synchronous opening of the Rio Grande rift along its entire length at 25–10 Ma supported by apatite (U-Th)/He and fission-track thermochronology, and evaluation of possible driving mechanisms
Post-breakup lithosphere recycling below the U.S. East Coast: Evidence from adakitic rocks
We present here the first geochemical data from adakitic rocks from an extensional system—the U.S. East Coast rifted margin. Adakitic magmas are high-K melts that have been petrogenetically interpreted to be partial melts of subducting slab and/or lower crustal lithologies in delamination events. The adakitic rocks presented here are from a small volcanic region in the Valley and Ridge province in Virginia and were probably emplaced around the time of continent rupture and Central Atlantic magmatic province activity. They are bimodal in character (high Si and low Si) and have the typical high- and low-Si adakitic geochemical characteristics such as high K 2 O (up to 9.88 wt%) abundances, steep rare earth element patterns, and significantly high Sr (2473 ppm) and relatively low Rb (35 ppm) contents for high-Si adakitic rocks. The petrogenetic relation of these melts to partial melting of metagabbroic rocks (high-Si adakites) and interaction of these melts with ambient peridotite (low-Si adakites) suggests that the geodynamic process for the formation of the studied Jurassic central Virginia igneous rock succession is delamination of mantle lithosphere and lower crust below the volcanic rifted margin. We present with geodynamic models that negatively buoyant mantle lithosphere instabilities developed below this passive margin during continent rupture. After foundering, warm asthenosphere welled up and heated the lower crust of the East Coast margin. This lithosphere was interspersed in our study area with fragmented hydrated metamorphic mafic to ultramafic lithologies. In situ and/or dripping melting of such meta-igneous rocks reproduces the observed geochemistry of the studied high-Si adakitic rocks. Further recycling processes within the convecting mantle of delaminated floating fertile meta-igneous rock packages could be responsible for Atlantic melting anomalies such as the Azores or Bermuda.
The upper mantle geoid: Implications for continental structure and the intraplate stress field
We use the fact that geoid anomalies are directly related to the local dipole moment of the density-depth distribution to help constrain density variations within the lithosphere and the associated tectonic stresses. The main challenge with this approach is isolating the upper mantle geoid contribution from the full geoid (which is dominated by sources in the lower mantle). We address this issue by using a high-pass spherical harmonic filtering of the EGM2008–WGS 84 geoid to produce an “upper mantle” geoid. The tectonic implications of the upper mantle are discussed in terms of plate tectonics and intraplate stresses. We find that globally there is a ~9 m geoid step associated with the cooling oceanic lithosphere that imparts a net force of ~2.5 × 10 12 N/m in the form of “ridge push”—a magnitude that is consistent with one-dimensional models based on first-order density profiles. Furthermore, we find a consistent 6 m geoid step across passive continental margins which has the net effect of reducing the compressive stresses in the continents due to the ridge push force. Furthermore, we use the upper mantle geoid to reevaluate the tectonic reference state which previous studies estimated using an assumption of Airy-based isostasy. Our evaluation of the upper mantle geoid confirms the near-equivalence of the gravitational potential energy of continental lithosphere with an elevation of ~750 m and the mid-ocean ridges. This result substantiates early conclusions about the tectonic reference state and further supports the prediction that continental regions are expected to be in a slightly extensional state of stress.
Magma-induced axial subsidence during final-stage rifting: Implications for the development of seaward-dipping reflectors
Roadmap to continental rupture: Is obliquity the route to success?
The rifting cycle initiates with stress buildup, release as earthquakes and/or magma intrusions/eruptions, and visco-elastic rebound, multiple episodes of which combine to produce the observed, time-averaged rift zone architecture. The aim of our synthesis of current research initiatives into continental rifting-to-rupture processes is to quantify the time and length scales of faulting and magmatism that produce the time-averaged rift structures imaged in active, failed rifts and passive margins worldwide. We compare and contrast seismic and geodetic strain patterns during discrete, intense rifting episodes in magmatic and amagmatic sectors of the East African rift zone that span early- to late-stage rifting. We also examine the longer term rifting cycle and its relation to changing far-field extension directions with examples from the Rio Grande rift zone and other cratonic rifts. Over time periods of millions of years, periods of rotating regional stress fields are marked by a lull in magmatic activity and a temporary halt to tectonic rift opening. Admittedly, rifting cycle comparisons are biased by the short time scale of global seismic and geodetic measurements, which span a small fraction of the 10 2 –10 5 year rifting cycle. Within rift sectors with upper crustal magma chambers beneath the central rift valley (e.g., Main Ethiopian, Afar, and Eastern or Gregory rifts) seismic energy release accounts for a small fraction of the deformation; most of the strain is accommodated by magma intrusion and slow-slip. Magma intrusion processes appear to decrease the time period between rifting episodes, effectively accelerating the rift to rupture process. Thus, the inter-seismic period in rift zones with crustal magma reservoirs is strongly dependent upon the magma replenishment cycle. This comparison also demonstrates that intense rifting events, both magmatic and amagmatic, produce the long-term fault displacements and maintain the along-axis rift architecture through repeated episodes. The magmatic events in particular accommodate centuries of inter-seismic strain, implying that inter-seismic-plate opening rates in late stage rifts should be extrapolated to the past with caution.
Uplift prior to continental breakup: Indication for removal of mantle lithosphere?
The mantle plume concept is currently being challenged as an explanation for North Atlantic Igneous Province formation. Alternative models have been suggested, including delamination, meteorite impact, small-scale rift-related convection, and chemical mantle heterogeneities. We review available data sets on uplift, strain localization, age and chemistry of igneous material, and tomography for the North Atlantic Igneous Province and compare them with predictions from the mantle plume and alternative models. The mantle plume concept is quite successful in explaining the formation of the North Atlantic Igneous Province, but unexplained aspects remain. Delamination and impact models are currently not supported. Rift-related small-scale convection models appear to be able to explain volcanic rifted margin volcanism well. However, the most important problem that nonplume models need to overcome is the continuing, long-lived melt anomaly extending via the Greenland and Faeroe ridges to Iceland. Mantle heterogeneities resulting from an ancient subducted slab are included in plate tectonic models to explain the continuing melt production as an alternative to the mantle plume model, but there are still uncertainties related to this idea that need to be solved.