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Wide‐Angle Seismic Imaging of Two Modes of Crustal Accretion in Mature Atlantic Ocean Crust.

Authors :
Davy, R. G.
Collier, J. S.
Henstock, T. J.
Rietbrock, Andreas
Goes, Saskia
Blundy, Jon
Harmon, Nick
Rychert, Catherine
Macpherson, Colin G.
Van Hunen, Jeroen
Kendall, Mike
Wilkinson, Jamie
Davidson, Jon
Wilson, Marjorie
Cooper, George
Maunder, Benjamin
Bie, Lidong
Hicks, Stephen
Allen, Robert
Chichester, Ben
Source :
Journal of Geophysical Research. Solid Earth; Jun2020, Vol. 125 Issue 6, p1-21, 21p
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

We present a high‐resolution 2‐D P‐wave velocity model from a 225‐km‐long active seismic profile, collected over ~60–75 Ma central Atlantic crust. The profile crosses five ridge segments separated by a transform and three nontransform offsets. All ridge discontinuities share similar primary characteristics, independent of the offset. We identify two types of crustal segment. The first displays a classic two‐layer velocity structure with a high gradient Layer 2 (~0.9 s−1) above a lower gradient Layer 3 (0.2 s−1). Here, PmP coincides with the 7.5 km s−1 contour, and velocity increases to >7.8 km s−1 within 1 km below. We interpret these segments as magmatically robust, with PmP representing a petrological boundary between crust and mantle. The second has a reduced contrast in velocity gradient between the upper and lower crust and PmP shallower than the 7.5 km s−1 contour. We interpret these segments as tectonically dominated, with PmP representing a serpentinized (alteration) front. While velocity‐depth profiles fit within previous envelopes for slow‐spreading crust, our results suggest that such generalizations give a misleading impression of uniformity. We estimate that the two crustal styles are present in equal proportions on the floor of the Atlantic. Within two tectonically dominated segments, we make the first wide‐angle seismic identifications of buried oceanic core complexes in mature (>20 Ma) Atlantic Ocean crust. They have a ~20‐km‐wide "domal" morphology with shallow basement and increased upper crustal velocities. We interpret their midcrustal seismic velocity inversions as alteration and rock‐type assemblage contrasts across crustal‐scale detachment faults. Key Points: We identify that magmatic and tectonic modes of slow Atlantic crustal accretion are distinct and equal, based on seismic characteristicsThe structure of crustal discontinuities is controlled by the accretion mode of neighboring segments, independent of ridge offset and orderTwo buried oceanic core complexes in mature Atlantic Ocean crust are identified, based on their dimensions and seismic structure [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21699313
Volume :
125
Issue :
6
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Geophysical Research. Solid Earth
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
144237652
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1029/2019JB019100