Search results for "submarine volcanism"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Submarine morphology of the Comoros volcanic archipelago

2021

co-auteur étranger; International audience; A detailed morpho-bathymetric study of the Comoros archipelago, based on mostly unpublished bathymetric data, provides a first glimpse into the submarine section of these islands. It offers a complete view of the distribution of volcanic structures around the archipelago, allowing to discuss the origin and evolution of this volcanism. Numerous volcanic cones and erosional-depositional features have been recognized throughout the archipelago. The magmatic supply is focused below one or several volcanoes for each island, but is also controlled by lithospheric fractures evidenced by volcanic ridges, oriented along the supposed Lwandle-Somali plate bo…

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesVolcanic ridges[SDU.STU.PE]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/PetrographySubmarine volcanismVolcanism010502 geochemistry & geophysicsOceanography01 natural sciencesPaleontologyComoros archipelagoGeochemistry and PetrologyLithosphereComoros archipelago Mass slope instabilities Morpho-bathymetry Mounds Submarine volcanism Volcanic cones Volcanic ridges[SDU.STU.VO]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/VolcanologyVolcanic conesMass slope instabilitiesBathymetry14. Life underwater0105 earth and related environmental sciencesgeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryMorpho-bathymetrySubmarineGeologyPlate tectonicsVolcanoArchipelagoMoundsVolcanic coneGeology
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Petrology and geochemistry of submarine volcanism in the Sicily Channel Rift

2006

Submarine magmatism in the Sicily Channel Rift began in the early Pliocene and lasted until almost 200 yr ago. We present here petrological and geochemical data on volcanic rocks dredged from Graham and Nameless banks and Pantelleria seamounts in the Pelagian sector of the Sicily Channel Rift. Petrological evidence suggests that the ascent of magmas to the surface was relatively rapid, probably through channels superimposed over the major tectonic discontinuities of the Rift. Major and trace element data indicate an ocean island basalt affinity for Graham and Nameless bank alkaline lavas and a depleted tholeiitic signature for one Pantelleria seamount, which had a shallower mantle source. S…

BasaltgeographyRiftgeography.geographical_feature_categoryRadiogenic nuclideSiciy Channel PAntelelriaSeamountSettore GEO/07 - Petrologia E PetrografiaGeochemistryGeologyOcean island basaltsicily channel riftMantle (geology)sr‐nd‐pb isotopesVolcanic rockMagmatismsicily channel rift; sr‐nd‐pb isotopes; submarine volcanismPetrologysubmarine volcanismGeology
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