| February
10, 2005
Findings By Scripps Scientists Cast
New Light On Undersea Volcanoes
Study in Science may help change the
broad understanding of how they are formed
By Mario Aguilera
Researchers at
Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California,
San Diego, have produced new findings that may help alter commonly
held beliefs about how chains of undersea mountains formed by
volcanoes, or “seamounts,” are created. Such mountains
can rise thousands of feet off the ocean floor in chains that
span thousands of miles across the ocean.
Since the mid-20th
century, the belief that the earth’s surface is covered
by large, shifting plates—a concept known as plate tectonics—has
shaped conventional thinking on how seamount chains develop.
Textbooks have taught students that seamount patterns are shaped
by changes in the direction and motion of the plates. As a plate
moves, stationary “hot spots” below the plate produce
magma that forms a series of volcanoes in the direction of the
plate motion.
Now, Anthony Koppers
and Hubert Staudigel of Scripps have published a study that
counters the idea that hot spots exist in fixed positions. The
paper in the Feb. 11 issue of Science shows that hot
spot chains can change direction as a result of processes unrelated
to plate motion. The new research adds further to current scientific
debates on hot spots and provides information for a better understanding
of the dynamics of the earth’s interior.

To investigate this
phenomenon, Staudigel led a research cruise in 1999 aboard the
Scripps research vessel Melville to the Pacific Ocean’s
Gilbert Ridge and Tokelau Seamounts near the international date
line, a few hundred miles north of American Samoa and just south
of the Marshall Islands.
Gilbert and Tokelau
are the only seamount trails in the Pacific that bend in sharp,
60-degree angles—comparable in appearance to hockey sticks—similar
to the bending pattern of the Hawaii-Emperor seamount chain
(which includes the Hawaiian Islands).
Assuming that these
three chains were created by fixed hot spots, the bends in the
Gilbert Ridge and Tokelau Seamounts should have been created
at roughly the same time period as the bend in the Hawaii-Emperor
chain, the conventional theory holds.
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| Hubert
Staudigel (left) and Anthony Koppers of Scripps |
Koppers, Staudigel
and a team of student researchers aboard Melville spent
six weeks exploring the ocean floor at Gilbert and Tokelau.
They used deep-sea dredges to collect volcanic rock samples
from the area.
For the next several
years, Koppers used laboratory instruments to analyze the composition
of the rock samples and calculate their ages.
“It was quite
a surprise that we found the Gilbert and Tokelau seamount bends
to have completely different ages than we expected,” said
Koppers, a researcher at the Cecil H. and Ida M. Green Institute
of Geophysics and Planetary Physics at Scripps. “We certainly
didn’t expect that they were 10 and 20 million years older
than previously thought.”
Instead of forming
47 million years ago, as did the Hawaiian-Emperor bend, the
Gilbert chain was found to be 67 million years old and the Tokelau
57 million years old.
“I think this
really hammers it in that the origin of the alignment of these
seamount chains may be much more complicated than we previously
believed, or the alignment may not have anything to do with
plate motion changes,” said Staudigel.
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| A
map of Beru Atoll, part of the Gilbert Ridge seamount chain
in the Pacific Ocean |
Although they do not
have positive proof as yet, Koppers and Staudigel speculate
that local stretching of the plate may allow magma to rise to
the surface or that hot spots themselves might move. Together
with plate motion, these alternate processes may be
responsible for the resulting pattern of seamounts.
Koppers and Staudigel
will go to sea again next year to seek additional clues to the
hot spot and seamount mysteries.
“Seamount trails
are thousands of kilometers long and even if we are out collecting
for several weeks, we still only cover a limited area,”
said Koppers. “One of the things holding us back in developing
a new theory is that the oceans are humongous and our database
is currently very small…we are trying to understand a
very big concept.”
The study was funded
by the National Science Foundation.
Media Contacts: Mario Aguilera or Cindy Clark
(858) 534-3624
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