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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2023-03-03
    Description: Tristan da Cunha is assumed to be the youngest subaerial expression of the Walvis Ridge hot spot. Based on new hydroacoustic data, we propose that the most recent hot spot volcanic activity occurs west of the island. We surveyed relatively young intraplate volcanic fields and scattered, probably monogenetic, submarine volcanoes with multibeam echosounders and sub-bottom profilers. Structural and zonal GIS analysis of bathymetric and backscatter results, based on habitat mapping algorithms to discriminate seafloor features, revealed numerous previously-unknown volcanic structures. South of Tristan da Cunha, we discovered two large seamounts. One of them, Isolde Seamount, is most likely the source of a 2004 submarine eruption known from a pumice stranding event and seismological analysis. An oceanic core complex, identified at the intersection of the Tristan da Cunha Transform and Fracture Zone System with the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, might indicate reduced magma supply and, therefore, weak plume-ridge interaction at present times.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; MARUM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2024-04-20
    Description: Multibeam echosounder (MBES) data recorded during RV MARIA S. MERIAN cruise MSM20-2 between 17.01.2012 and 15.02.2012 around Tristan da Cunha. The Tristan da Cunha hotspot is thought to have played a major role in the rifting of the South Atlantic margins and the creation of the aseismic Walvis Ridge by impinging at the base of the continental lithosphere shortly before or during the breakup of the South Atlantic margins. MSM20-2 staged therefore a multi-disciplinary geophysical study of the Tristan da Cunha hotspot by acquiring passive marine electromagnetic and seismic data, bathymetric data as well as gravity data from which we will derive an electrical resistivity, velocity and density model down to a depth of several hundred kilometers. CI Citation: Paul Wintersteller (seafloor-imaging@marum.de) as responsible party for bathymetry raw data ingest and approval. Description of the data source: During the RV MARIA S. MERIAN cruise, MSM20-2 the Kongsberg EM120 multi-beam echo sounder was used. The echosounder uses a nominal sounding frequency of 12 kHz. 191 beams with a 2°/2° footprint are formed for each ping while the seafloor is detected using amplitude and phase information for each beam sounding. For further information, consult https://epic.awi.de/26725/1/Kon2007a.pdf. The EM120 was operated continuously during the cruise including transit routes in a 24-hour schedule. The angular coverage sector and beam pointing angles were set to vary automatically with depth according to achievable coverage. The beam spacing was set to equidistant. The ship's speed varied from 13 kn during the transits and during the deployments to 8 kn during the surveys around Tristan da Cunha, the Tristan da Cunha Fracture Zone and the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. The quality of the data varied considerably during the cruise, being extremely noisy during the fast speed lines (see section Data Quality Evaluation). The maximum opening angle for the swath also varied during the cruise, being set to 56-56 for the fast speed lines and up to 64-64 (port-starboard) for the slow speed survey lines, since most of the external beams were lost at fast speeds. This resulted in an extremely variable ratio width/depth for the swath. Responsible person during this cruise / PI: Marcia Mia (marcia.maia univ-brest.fr). Chief scientist: Marion Jegen-Kulcsar (mjegen@geomar.de) CR: https://www.tib.eu/de/suchen/id/awi%3Adoi~10.2312%252Fcr_msm20_2/ CSR: https://www2.bsh.de/aktdat/dod/fahrtergebnis/2012/20120063.htm ADCP: https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.823159
    Keywords: Bathymetry; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; CT; EM120; File format; File name; File size; Maria S. Merian; MARUM; MBES; MSM20/2; MSM20/2-track; Tristan da Cunha; Underway cruise track measurements; Uniform resource locator/link to file
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 4628 data points
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1365-3121
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: A geophysical survey in the eastern Gulf of Aden, between the Alula–Fartak (52°E) and the Socotra (55°E) transform faults, was carried out during the Encens–Sheba cruise. The conjugate margins of the Gulf are steep, narrow and asymmetric. Asymmetry of the rifting process is highlighted by the conjugate margins (horst and graben in the north and deep basin in the south). Two transfer fault zones separate the margins into three segments, whereas the present-day Sheba Ridge is divided into two segments by a transform discontinuity. Therefore segmentation of the Sheba Ridge and that of the conjugate margins did coincide during the early stages of oceanic spreading. Extensive magma production is evidenced in the central part of the western segment. Anomaly 5d was identified in the northern and southern parts of the oceanic basin, thus confirming that seafloor spreading in this part of Gulf of Aden started at least 17.6 Ma ago.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1573-0581
    Keywords: Back-arc basin ; spreading center ; axial morphology ; Manile Bouguer Anomaly ; segmentation ; thermal modelling
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Abstract The Central Spreading Ridge (CSR) is located in the central part of the North Fiji Basin, a complex back-arc basin created 12 Ma ago between the Pacific and Indo-Australian plates. The 3.5 Ma old CSR is the best developed, for both structure and magmatism, of all the spreading centers identified in the basin, and may be one of the largest spreading systems of the west Pacific back-arc basins. It is more than 800 km long and 50–60 km wide, and has been intensively explored during the French-Japanese STARMER project (1987–1991). The CSR is segmented into three first order segments named, from north to south, N160°, N15° and N-S according to their orientation. This segmentation pattern is similar to that found at mid-ocean ridges. The calculated spreading rate is intermediate and ranges from 83 mm/yr at 20°30′ S to 50 mm/yr at 17°S. In addition, there is a change in the axial ridge morphology and gravity structure between the northern and southern sections of the CSR. The axial morphology changes from a deep rift valley (N160° segment), to a dome split by an axial graben (N15° segment) and to a rectangular flat top high (N-S segment). The Mantle Bouguer Anomalies obtained on the northern part of the CSR (N160°/N15° segments) show “bull's eye” structures associated with mantle upwelling at the 16°50′S triple junction and also in the middle of the segments. The Mantle Bouguer Anomalies of the southern part of the ridge (N-S segment) are more homogeneous and consistent with the observed smooth topography associated with axial isostatic compensation. At these intermediate spreading rates the contrast in bathymetry and gravity structure between the segments may reflect differences in heat supply. We suggest that the N160° and N15° segments are “cold” with respect to the “hot” N-S segment. We use a non-steady-state thermal model to test this hypothesis. In this model, the accretion is simulated as a nearly steady-state seafloor spreading upon which are superimposed periodic thermal inputs. With the measured spreading rate of 50 mm/yr, a cooling cycle of 200,000 yr develops a thermal state that permits to explain the axial morphology and gravity structure observed on the N160° segment. A spreading rate of 83 mm/yr and a cooling cycle of 120,000 yr would generate the optimal thermal structure to explain the characteristics of the N-S segment. The boundaries between the “hot” N-S segment and its “cold” bounding segments are the 18°10′ S and 20°30′ S propagating rifts. A heat propagation event along the N-S segment at the expense of the adjacent colder failing segments, can explain the sharp changes in the observed morphology and structure between the segments.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2020-12-20
    Description: Tristan da Cunha is assumed to be the youngest subaerial expression of the Walvis Ridge hot spot. Based on new hydroacoustic data, we propose that the most recent hot spot volcanic activity occurs west of the island. We surveyed relatively young intraplate volcanic fields and scattered, probably monogenetic, submarine volcanoes with multibeam echosounders and sub-bottom profilers. Structural and zonal GIS analysis of bathymetric and backscatter results, based on habitat mapping algorithms to discriminate seafloor features, revealed numerous previously-unknown volcanic structures. South of Tristan da Cunha, we discovered two large seamounts. One of them, Isolde Seamount, is most likely the source of a 2004 submarine eruption known from a pumice stranding event and seismological analysis. An oceanic core complex, identified at the intersection of the Tristan da Cunha Transform and Fracture Zone System with the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, might indicate reduced magma supply and, therefore, weak plume-ridge interaction at present times.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2016-12-11
    Description: According to classical plume theory, the Tristan da Cunha hotspot is thought to have played a major role in the rifting of the South Atlantic margins and the creation of the aseismic Walvis Ridge by impinging at the base of the continental lithosphere shortly before or during the breakup of the South Atlantic margins. But Tristan da Cunha is enigmatic, as it cannot be clearly identified as a hot-spot but classifies also highly as a more shallow type of anomaly that may actually have been caused by the opening of the South Atlantic. The equivocal character of Tristan is largely due to lack of geophysical data in this region. To understand the tectonic processes of the opening of the South Atlantic, the formation of the Walvis ridge and to understand whether Tristan da Cunha is the cause or the consequence of rifting, it is of central importance to characterize the region around Tristan da Cunha in a more coherent way. Within this research cruise we deployed 26 ocean bottom electromagnetic stations (OEBM) and 24 ocean bottom seismometer (OBS) for a long term acquisition (1 year) of magnetotelluric and seismological data, acquired bathymetry and gravity data and performed geological sampling on Tristan da Cunha. The data will be interpreted in the context of geochemical data and tectonic models developed within the SPP1375 South Atlantic Margin Processes and Links with onshore Evolution (SAMPLE).
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Miscellaneous , notRev
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2017-09-24
    Description: The Walvis Ridge-Rio Grande Rise System is the only seamount chain in the Atlantic that is known being continuously active since the Cretaceous (130 Ma) and one of very few worldwide, that links an active hotspot (Tristan-Gough) with a continental flood basalt province (the Paraná-Etendeka province in South America and Africa). Previous work has documented age-progressive volcanism along at least parts of the Walvis Ridge and several initiatives acquired new geophysical and petrological data from seamounts of the Walvis Ridge and its southerly neighbours over the last decade. The youngest stretch of the Walvis Ridge, the islands of Tristan da Cunha, was the focus of the ISOLDE project within the DFG priority program SPP1375 „South Atlantic Margin Processes and Links with onshore Evolution (SAMPLE)”. Temporary seismological and magneto-telluric measurements were carried out to characterize the upper mantle in the search for evidence of a mantle plume. Two expeditions with R/V MARIA S. MERIAN headed towards this remote area to install and dismantle ocean-bottom stations in 2012 and 2013, respectively. Hydroacoustic data were collected along the tracks and around the islands, allowing a first detailed bathymetric insight to the area, underpinned by backscatter and sediment echo sounder observations. One unexpected outcome was the discovery of a new submarine volcano, Isolde Seamount, at the eastern flanks of Nightingale Island. Isolde lies very close to the assumed site of a submarine eruption in 2004, known only from floating pumice and seismicity. Further submarine volcanic centres could be mapped around the islands. Of interest are two volcanic fields, each about 20 x 40 km across, to the NW of Inaccessible Island, where small monogenetic volcanic cones and young lava flows were mapped. Young volcanic activity seems to extend up to 250 km westwards from the Tristan group to about 14.8 W, where we mapped a small volcanic cone on top of old abyssal hills only 130 km east of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. Further westward, normal seafloor fabric, with clearly defined abyssal hills, dominates the seafloor. Scattered volcanic activity is visible along and in close vicinity to the Tristan da Cunha Fracture Zone. The intraplate volcanic fields as well as the scattered probably monogenetic submarine volcanoes could indicate that the Tristan mantle plume (or at least part of it) currently sits to the west/southwest of Tristan da Cunha.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Conference , notRev
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2020-04-12
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Conference , notRev
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  • 9
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