4.7 Article

Longest continuously erupting large igneous province driven by plume-ridge interaction

期刊

GEOLOGY
卷 49, 期 2, 页码 206-210

出版社

GEOLOGICAL SOC AMER, INC
DOI: 10.1130/G47850.1

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  1. Australian Antarctic Division Science Project [4446]
  2. China Scholarship Council-Curtin International Postgraduate Research (CSC-CIPRS) scholarship
  3. Australian Research Council [DP180102280]

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The Kerguelen Large Igneous Province (LIP) demonstrates the longest and highest magma flux emplacement interval among all LIPs, attributed to long-term interactions between a mantle plume and mid-ocean ridge, enabled by multiple ridge jumps, slow spreading, and ridge migration. This unique type of LIP resulted in long-lived and continuous magmatic activity, transporting magma products away from the eruption center.
Large igneous provinces (LIPs) typically form in one short pulse of similar to 1-5 Ma or several punctuated similar to 1-5 Ma pulses. Here, our 25 new 40Ar/39Ar plateau ages for the main construct of the Kerguelen LIP-the Cretaceous Southern and Central Kerguelen Plateau, Elan Bank, and Broken Ridge-show continuous volcanic activity from ca. 122 to 90 Ma, a long lifespan of >32 Ma. This suggests that the Kerguelen LIP records the longest, continuous high-magma flux emplacement interval of any LIP. Distinct from both short-lived and multiple-pulsed LIPs, we propose that Kerguelen is a different type of LIP that formed through long-term interactions between a mantle plume and mid-ocean ridge, which is enabled by multiple ridge jumps, slow spreading, and migration of the ridge. Such processes allow the transport of magma products away from the eruption center and result in long-lived, continuous magmatic activity.

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