Authors
Juan Carlos Carracedo, Si Day, Hervé Guillou, E Rodríguez Badiola, José Antonio Cañas, FJ Pérez Torrado
Publication date
1998/9
Journal
Geological magazine
Volume
135
Issue
5
Pages
591-604
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Description
The Canarian Archipelago is a group of volcanic islands on a slow-moving oceanic plate, close to a continental margin. The origins of the archipelago are controversial: a hotspot or mantle plume, a zone of lithospheric deformation, a region of compressional block-faulting or a rupture propagating westwards from the active Atlas Mountains fold belt have been proposed by different authors. However, comparison of the Canarian Archipelago with the prototypical hotspot-related island group, the Hawaiian Archipelago, reveals that the differences between the two are not as great as had previously been supposed on the basis of older data. Quaternary igneous activity in the Canaries is concentrated at the western end of the archipelago, close to the present-day location of the inferred hotspot. This is the same relationship as seen in the Hawaiian and Cape Verde islands. The latter archipelago, associated with a well …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
JC Carracedo, S Day, H Guillou, ER Badiola, JA Cañas… - Geological magazine, 1998