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unknown
Frozen magma lenses below the oceanic crust
Authors
A Nicolas
Alistair J. Harding
+29 more
D Jousselin
DS Wilson
F Boudier
F Boudier
G Ceuleneer
Graham M. Kent
I Amri
J Garmany
J Korenaga
J Phipps Morgan
J. Pablo Canales
JA Collins
JA Karson
Jeffrey M. Babcock
JM Sinton
John B. Diebold
K Benn
M Godard
Michael Tischer
Mladen R. Nedimović
PB Kelemen
R Hey
R Hey
RA Dunn
RL Carlson
Robert S. Detrick
Suzanne M. Carbotte
TM Brocher
WC Crawford
Publication date
15 June 2005
Publisher
'Springer Science and Business Media LLC'
Doi
Cite
Abstract
Author Posting. © The Authors, 2005. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Nature Publishing Group for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Nature 436 (2005): 1149-1152, doi:10.1038/nature03944.The Earth's oceanic crust crystallizes from magmatic systems generated at mid-ocean ridges. Whereas a single magma body residing within the mid-crust is thought to be responsible for the generation of the upper oceanic crust, it remains unclear if the lower crust is formed from the same magma body, or if it mainly crystallizes from magma lenses located at the base of the crust. Thermal modelling, tomography, compliance and wide-angle seismic studies, supported by geological evidence, suggest the presence of gabbroic-melt accumulations within the Moho transition zone in the vicinity of fast- to intermediate-spreading centres. Until now, however, no reflection images have been obtained of such a structure within the Moho transition zone. Here we show images of groups of Moho transition zone reflection events that resulted from the analysis of approximately 1,500 km of multichannel seismic data collected across the intermediate-spreading-rate Juan de Fuca ridge. From our observations we suggest that gabbro lenses and melt accumulations embedded within dunite or residual mantle peridotite are the most probable cause for the observed reflectivity, thus providing support for the hypothesis that the crust is generated from multiple magma bodies
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