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Seismic structure of the Endeavour Segment, Juan de Fuca Ridge : correlations with seismicity and hydrothermal activity
Authors
A. J. Harding
Alt
+97 more
Bach
Baker
Baran
Barclay
Bhat
Blacic
Bohnenstiehl
Buck
Butterfield
Butterfield
Butterfield
Canales
Canales
Cann
Carbotte
Carbotte
Carbotte
Carbotte
Chen
Collier
Collier
Collier
Cudrak
Cudrak
Cudrak
Delaney
Delaney
Delaney
DeMets
Detrick
Detrick
Dunn
E. M. Van Ark
Fornari
G. M. Kent
Hannington
Harding
Haymon
Haymon
Holmes
Hooft
J. B. Diebold
J. M. Babcock
J. P. Canales
Jacobs
Johnson
Johnson
Kadko
Kappel
Karsten
Karsten
Kelley
Kelley
Kelley
Kent
Kent
Kent
Kent
Lilley
Lilley
Lister
Lister
Lister
Lister
Lowenthal
M. R. Nedimovic
McClain
Mutter
Nedimovic
Nedimovic
Phipps Morgan
Purdy
R. S. Detrick
Robigou
Rohr
S. M. Carbotte
Sarrazin
Sohn
Sohn
Sours-Page
Thomson
Tivey
Tivey
Tivey
Tivey
Veirs
Von Damm
W. S. D. Wilcock
Weekly
White
White
Wilcock
Wilcock
Wilcock
Wilson
Yoerger
Zelt
Publication date
3 February 2007
Publisher
'American Geophysical Union (AGU)'
Doi
Cite
Abstract
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2007. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Geophysical Research 112 (2007): B02401, doi:10.1029/2005JB004210.Multichannel seismic reflection data collected in July 2002 at the Endeavour Segment, Juan de Fuca Ridge, show a midcrustal reflector underlying all of the known high-temperature hydrothermal vent fields in this area. On the basis of the character and geometry of this reflection, its similarity to events at other spreading centers, and its polarity, we identify this as a reflection from one or more crustal magma bodies rather than from a hydrothermal cracking front interface. The Endeavour magma chamber reflector is found under the central, topographically shallow section of the segment at two-way traveltime (TWTT) values of 0.9–1.4 s (∼2.1–3.3 km) below the seafloor. It extends approximately 24 km along axis and is shallowest beneath the center of the segment and deepens toward the segment ends. On cross-axis lines the axial magma chamber (AMC) reflector is only 0.4–1.2 km wide and appears to dip 8–36° to the east. While a magma chamber underlies all known Endeavour high-temperature hydrothermal vent fields, AMC depth is not a dominant factor in determining vent fluid properties. The stacked and migrated seismic lines also show a strong layer 2a event at TWTT values of 0.30 ± 0.09 s (380 ± 120 m) below the seafloor on the along-axis line and 0.38 ± 0.09 s (500 ± 110 m) on the cross-axis lines. A weak Moho reflection is observed in a few locations at TWTT values of 1.9–2.4 s below the seafloor. By projecting hypocenters of well-located microseismicity in this region onto the seismic sections, we find that most axial earthquakes are concentrated just above the magma chamber and distributed diffusely within this zone, indicating thermal-related cracking. The presence of a partially molten crustal magma chamber argues against prior hypotheses that hydrothermal heat extraction at this intermediate spreading ridge is primarily driven by propagation of a cracking front down into a frozen magma chamber and indicates that magmatic heat plays a significant role in the hydrothermal system. Morphological and hydrothermal differences between the intermediate spreading Endeavour and fast spreading ridges are attributable to the greater depth of the Endeavour AMC and the corresponding possibility of axial faulting.E.V.A. was supported by a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship, the WHOI-MIT Joint Program, and the WHOI Deep Ocean Exploration Institute. This work was also supported by OCE-0002551 to the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, OCE-0002488 to Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, and OCE-0002600 to Scripps Institution of Oceanography
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