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  Toroidal flow around the Tonga slab moved the Samoan plume during the Pliocene

Konrad, K., Jackson, M., Steinberger, B., Koppers, A., Balbas, A., Finlayson, V., Konter, J., Price, A. (2024): Toroidal flow around the Tonga slab moved the Samoan plume during the Pliocene. - Geology, 52, 3, 176-180.
https://doi.org/10.1130/G51588.1

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Konrad, Kevin1, Author
Jackson, Matthew1, Author
Steinberger, B.2, Author              
Koppers, Anthony1, Author
Balbas, Andrea1, Author
Finlayson, Valerie1, Author
Konter, Jasper1, Author
Price, Allison1, Author
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1External Organizations, ou_persistent22              
22.5 Geodynamic Modelling, 2.0 Geophysics, Departments, GFZ Publication Database, Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum, ou_146031              

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 Abstract: Age-progressive seamount tracks generated by lithospheric motion over a stationary mantle plume have long been used to reconstruct absolute plate motion (APM) models. However, the basis of these models requires the plumes to move significantly slower than the overriding lithosphere. When a plume interacts with a convergent or divergent plate boundary, it is often deflected within the strong local mantle flow fields associated with such regimes. Here, we examined the age progression and geometry of the Samoa hotspot track, focusing on lava flow samples dredged from the deep flanks of seamounts in order to best reconstruct when a given seamount was overlying the mantle plume (i.e., during the shield-building stage). The Samoan seamounts display an apparent local plate velocity of 7.8 cm/yr from 0 to 9 Ma, 11.1 cm/yr from 9 to 14 Ma, and 5.6 cm/yr from 14 to 24 Ma. Current fixed and mobile hotspot Pacific APM models cannot reproduce the geometry of the Samoa seamount track if a long-term fixed hotspot location, currently beneath the active Vailulu’u Seamount, is assumed. Rather, reconstruction of the eruptive locations of the Samoan seamounts using APM models indicates that the surface expression of the plume migrated ~2° northward in the Pliocene. Large-scale mantle flow beneath the Pacific Ocean Basin cannot explain this plume migration. Instead, the best explanation is that toroidal flow fields—generated by westward migration of the Tonga Trench and associated slab rollback—have deflected the conduit northward over the past 2–3 m.y. These observations provide novel constraints on the ways in which plume-trench interactions can alter hotspot track geometries.

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Language(s): eng - English
 Dates: 2024-01-032024
 Publication Status: Finally published
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 Identifiers: DOI: 10.1130/G51588.1
GFZPOF: p4 T3 Restless Earth
OATYPE: Green Open Access
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Title: Geology
Source Genre: Journal, SCI, Scopus
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Pages: - Volume / Issue: 52 (3) Sequence Number: - Start / End Page: 176 - 180 Identifier: CoNE: https://gfzpublic.gfz-potsdam.de/cone/journals/resource/journals174
Publisher: Geological Society of America (GSA)