Roadmap | The website review process | Home
:: MECHANISMS ::  Ridge-transform intersections Impacts Plate tectonic processes Reheated slabs Gravitational instability EDGE
  Earth tessellation Rifting decompression meltingSlab breakoff PLATEHydration weakening Plumes Small-scale convection
:: LOCALITIES ::
Olivine control temperatures
Recycling
Titanium
Tomography problems
Hell
Transition zone
Mantle warming
Plumes
Plume coffin
Self-organization
LIP classification
Osmium & tungsten
Lithospheric uplift
Lower crust recycling
Origin of OIB
Eclogite reservoirs
Norwegian volcanic margin
Volcanic margins
Silicic LIPs
Metasomatic OIB
What is a plume?
Komatiites
Neon & Argon
Thermal
Mantle temperature under LIPs
Ar-Ar dating
Pacific seamount ages
Hotspot table
Radiating volcanic migrations
Giant dikes
Cracks & stress
Plumes exist because...
Convection
Hotspot reference frame
Seismology
Noble gases
Pt-Os
Mantle reservoirs
General theory of plate tectonics


Localities : Africa | Antarctica | Atlantic | Central America | Eurasia | Iceland | India | North America | Pacific | Planetary | South America

:: A glance at today's paper ::  
Ukstins Peate, I. and Scott Edward Bryan, Re-evaluating plume-induced uplift in the Emeishan large igneous province, Nature Geoscience, 1, 625 - 629, doi:10.1038/ngeo281


Recent scholarly articles


Magazine articles


Foundations


Volcanic margins


Related links



The P^3 Book



Bibliographies & papers

:: Notice Board:


Special Sessions,
Fall AGU,
San Francisco,
15-19 December, 2008

T31: Global Tectonics and the Paleocene ~62 Myr (~mid Danian) Plate Reorganization: Observed Signatures and Models

V03: Large Igneous Province Development and Environmental Impacts

T08: Magma-Rich Extensional Environments: Evolution
of Continental Basins and Rifted Continent Margins

T13: Research Advances on the Geologic, Tectonic, & Geochemical Evolution of the Indian Ocean Seafloor & its Margins



Controls of post-Gondwana alkaline volcanism in southern Africa

A. Moore, T. Blenkinsop & F. Cotterill



P^4 Book


Slide shows


Conferences


LIPs


Planetary


Talk about plumes


Plume coffin

Any questions? Any Comments? Want to contribute? | About this site


:: Comments::

:: Comments? Questions?::
email the website manager


MantlePlumes.org mugs. To order, click here

5th Sept., 2008
Dear WM, An article by Drs. Ingrid Ukstins Peate and Edward Bryan in the current issue of Nature Geoscience would be interesting for geologists involved in the mantle plume debate. It is entitled “Re-evaluating plume-induced uplift in the Emeishan large igneous province”.–Todd Rainey


30th August, 2008
Dear WM, You probably don't remember, but you used to be one of my lecturers in 1997-2000 at Durham!

Please find attached a PDF of my recent paper on the Muskox Intrusion. It is pertinent to the www. mantleplumes.org readership. It is partly concerned with the source of the Mackenzie LIP–a contentious issue and one of relevance to the mantle plume debate.–James Day


24th August, 2008
Dear WM, As part of my "Integrating Research and Education" project (funded by NSF), we did a number of "guided discovery exercises" for students to explore interesting and important topics. Kent Ratajeski did a nice unit on "Is Yellowstone Volcanism Caused by a Deep-Seated Mantle Plume?". Please feel free to link to our metadata page about this site if appropriate on your Mantle Plumes site.–Dave Mogk


22nd August, 2008
Dear WM, I propose that the well-known acronym “OIB”, for “ocean island basalts”, is henceforth used to denote “oceanic intraplate basalts”.

There are two reasons for my proposal:

(i) Islands are merely the tops of submarine volcanoes and the term “ocean island basalt” does not include the thousands of seamounts that lie scattered throughout the Pacific and other ocean basins. Most of these seamounts do not define systematic chains, a fact that is of relevance to the plume hypothesis (the “galaxy effect”).

(ii) The term “ocean island basalt” by itself does not say anything about the intraplate origin of the islands in question. There are oceanic island arcs related to subduction which are a plate boundary phenomenon. “Ocean island basalt” should include the basalts of the oceanic island arcs, inasmuch as they are “oceanic”, “islands”, and erupt “basalt”. Thus, OIB and IAB are not really exclusive.

Of course, there are rocks other than basalt in arcs, and I am happy if even the “B” is replaced by something general – simply R for “rocks?”.

But if the term "OIB" is to be continued, then, to avoid these problems, and to ensure terminological accuracy, OIB should be used for “Oceanic Intraplate Basalts”. If used in this way, the term means that the said basalts are “oceanic”, and formed by “intraplate” mechanisms, and therefore island arc basalts (IABs) would be automatically excluded.

Comments are welcome.Hetu Sheth


::more::

 

:: HOME :: MECHANISMS :: LOCALITIES :: GENERIC ::
© MantlePlumes.org