Authors
Daniel Lizarralde, Gary J Axen, Hillary E Brown, John M Fletcher, Antonio González-Fernández, Alistair J Harding, W Steven Holbrook, Graham M Kent, Pedro Paramo, Fiona Sutherland, Paul J Umhoefer
Publication date
2007/7/26
Journal
Nature
Volume
448
Issue
7152
Pages
466-469
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
Constraints on the structure of rifted continental margins and the magmatism resulting from such rifting can help refine our understanding of the strength of the lithosphere, the state of the underlying mantle and the transition from rifting to seafloor spreading. An important structural classification of rifts is by width, with narrow rifts thought to form as necking instabilities (where extension rates outpace thermal diffusion) and wide rifts thought to require a mechanism to inhibit localization, such as lower-crustal flow in high heat-flow settings,. Observations of the magmatism that results from rifting range from volcanic margins with two to three times the magmatism predicted from melting models to non-volcanic margins with almost no rift or post-rift magmatism. Such variations in magmatic activity are commonly attributed to variations in mantle temperature. Here we describe results from the PESCADOR seismic experiment in …
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Scholar articles
D Lizarralde, GJ Axen, HE Brown, JM Fletcher… - Nature, 2007