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Journal ArticleDOI

Flood Basalts and Hot-Spot Tracks: Plume Heads and Tails

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TLDR
Continental flood basalt eruptions have resulted in sudden and massive accumulations of basaltic lavas in excess of any contemporary volcanic processes, thought to result from deep mantle plumes.
Abstract
Continental flood basalt eruptions have resulted in sudden and massive accumulations of basaltic lavas in excess of any contemporary volcanic processes. The largest flood basalt events mark the earliest volcanic activity of many major hot spots, which are thought to result from deep mantle plumes. The relative volumes of melt and eruption rates of flood basalts and hot spots as well as their temporal and spatial relations can be explained by a model of mantle plume initiation: Flood basalts represent plume "heads" and hot spots represent continuing magmatism associated with the remaining plume conduit or "tail." Continental rifting is not required, although it commonly follows flood basalt volcanism, and flood basalt provinces may occur as a natural consequence of the initiation of hot-spot activity in ocean basins as well as on continents.

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Early to Middle Miocene intra-continental basaltic volcanism in the northern part of the Arabian plate, SE Anatolia, Turkey: geochemistry and petrogenesis

TL;DR: In this article, the authors have analyzed a large number of olivine phenocrysts from the northern part of the Arabian plate and found that they are tholeiitic in composition, implying the mixing of two distinct magmas.
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A revised interpretation of the Chon Aike magmatic province: Active margin origin and implications for the opening of the Weddell Sea

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present new geochronological (LA-ICP-MS zircon U Pb dates) analyses of 12 intrusive and volcanic rocks, which are complemented by geochemical and ZIRcon isotopic (Hf) as well as whole rock isotopic data.
Journal ArticleDOI

Geochemistry and geochronology of OIB-type, Early Jurassic magmatism in the Zhangguangcai range, NE China, as a result of continental back-arc extension

TL;DR: The Zhangguangcai Range in the Xing’an Mongolian Orogenic Belt, NE China, contains Early Jurassic (c. 188 Ma) Dabaizigou (DBZG) porphyritic dolerite.
Journal ArticleDOI

Physics and Chemistry of Mantle Plumes

TL;DR: Okal and Batiza as discussed by the authors studied the origin and evolution of the Hawaiian-Emperor volcanic chain, which dominates the topography of the central Pacific ocean floor, is the best developed and most intensely studied of the known hot spot tracks.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Magmatism at rift zones: The generation of volcanic continental margins and flood basalts

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that the production of magmatically active rifted margins and the effusion of flood basalts onto the adjacent continents can be explained by a simple model of rifting above a thermal anomaly in the underlying mantle.
Book ChapterDOI

Plate Motions and Deep Mantle Convection

TL;DR: In this article, a scheme of deep mantle convection is proposed in which narrow plumes of deep material rise and then spread out radially in the asthenosphere, and thus their strikes show the direction the plates were moving as they were formed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Deccan flood basalts at the Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary?

TL;DR: In this paper, the Deccan continental flood basalts in India have been considered and it was suggested that volcanic activity may have lasted less than 1 Ma, thus possibly ranking as one of the largest volcanic catastrophes in the last 200 Ma.
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