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Hydrothermally-induced melt lens cooling and segmentation along the axis of fast- and intermediate-spreading centers
Authors
Bird
Canales
+43 more
Cannat
Collier
Coumou
Crone
Douglas
Fabrice J. Fontaine
Fontaine
Fontaine
Fornari
France
Gillis
Gillis
Haymon
Hirth
Hooft
Javier Escartin
Jean-Arthur Olive
Kelley
Kent
Lapwood
Liu
Lowell
Lowell
Lowell
Mathilde Cannat
Mottl
Mutter
Nicolas
Nield
Rubin
Singh
Singh
Sinha
Sinton
Sinton
Thibaut Perol
Tivey
Tolstoy
Van Ark
Vera
Wilcock
Wilcock
Wilcock
Publication date
1 January 2011
Publisher
'American Geophysical Union (AGU)'
Doi
Abstract
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2011. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Geophysical Research Letters 38 (2011): L14307, doi:10.1029/2011GL047798.The heat output and thermal regime of fast and intermediate spreading centers are strongly controlled by boundary layer processes between the hydrothermal system and the underlying crustal magma chamber (AMC), which remain to be fully understood. Here, we model the interactions between a shallow two-dimensional cellular hydrothermal system at temperatures <700°C, and a deeper AMC at temperatures up to 1200°C. We show that hydrothermal cooling can freeze the AMC in years to decades, unless melt injections occur on commensurate timescales. Moreover, the differential cooling between upflow and downflow zones can segment the AMC into mush and melt regions that alternate on sub-kilometric length scales. These predictions are consistent with along-axis variations in AMC roof depth observed in ophiolites and oceanic settings. In this respect, fine-scale geophysical investigations of the structure of AMCs may help constrain hydrothermal recharge locations associated with active hydrothermal sites
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