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Keweenaw hot spot: Geophysical evidence for a 1.1 Ga mantle plume beneath the Midcontinent Rift System
164
Citations
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References
1990
Year
VolcanologyEngineeringMantle DynamicContinental TectonicsTectonic EvolutionEarth ScienceGeophysicsHigh DensityRift SystemGeochronologyKeweenaw Hot SpotMidcontinent Rift SystemGeographyGeologyLithosphereMantle GeochemistryTectonicsSubduction ZoneGa Mantle PlumeEconomic GeologyDecompression MeltingCrust-mantle InteractionNorth AmericaPetrology
The Proterozoic Midcontinent Rift System of North America is remarkably similar to Phanerozoic rifted continental margins and flood basalt provinces. Like the younger analogues, the volcanism within this older rift can be explained by decompression melting and rapid extrusion of igneous material during lithospheric extension above a broad, asthenospheric, thermal anomaly which we call the Keweenaw hot spot. Great Lakes International Multidisciplinary Program on Crustal Evolution seismic reflection profiles constrain end‐member models of melt thickness and stretching factors, which yield an inferred mantle potential temperature of 1500°–1570°C during rifting. Combined gravity modeling and subsidence calculations are consistent with stretching factors that reached 3 or 4 before rifting ceased, and much of the lower crust beneath the rift consists of relatively high density intruded or underplated synrift igneous material. The isotopic signature of Keweenawan volcanic rocks, presented in a companion paper by Nicholson and Shirey (this issue), is consistent with our model of passive rifting above an asthenospheric mantle plume.
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