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Subduction of the oceanic Hikurangi Plateau and its impact on the Kermadec arc

Authors :
Cornel E. J. de Ronde
Jon Woodhead
Folkmar Hauff
Dan Bassett
Kaj Hoernle
Nick Mortimer
Karsten M. Haase
Bryan Davy
Richard J. Wysoczanski
John A. Gamble
Christian Timm
Ian J. Graham
Fabio Caratori-Tontini
Hannu Seebeck
Source :
Nature Communications, 5 (Article 4923).
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2014.

Abstract

Large igneous province subduction is a rare process on Earth. A modern example is the subduction of the oceanic Hikurangi Plateau beneath the southern Kermadec arc, offshore New Zealand. This segment of the arc has the largest total lava volume erupted and the highest volcano density of the entire Kermadec arc. Here we show that Kermadec arc lavas south of B32°S have elevated Pb and Sr and low Nd isotope ratios, which argues, together with increasing seafloor depth, forearc retreat and crustal thinning, for initial Hikurangi Plateau—Kermadec arc collision B250 km north of its present position. The combined data set indicates that a much larger portion of the Hikurangi Plateau (the missing Ontong Java Nui piece) than previously believed has already been subducted. Oblique plate convergence caused southward migration of the thickened and buoyant oceanic plateau crust, creating a buoyant ‘Hikurangi’ me´lange beneath the Moho that interacts with ascending arc melts.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications, 5 (Article 4923).
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....63a08938816f45c9642facedfdcf9902