Javascript must be enabled to continue!
The Magmatic Patterns Formed by the Interaction of the Hainan Mantle Plume and Lei–Qiong Crust Revealed through Seismic Ambient Noise Imaging
View through CrossRef
Magmatism on continental lithospheres induced by mantle plumes is more complex compared to oceanic intraplate volcanism owing to the heterogeneous nature of continental crustal and lithospheric structures. Substantial evidence points to the deep-oriented Hainan mantle plume beneath the Lei–Qiong region, the southernmost of the South China block. In this study, we present a detailed shear wave velocity model of the crust and uppermost mantle in the Lei–Qiong volcanic region, derived from 3-year seismic data (2016–2018) from 34 stations and the use of the ambient noise tomography method. An evident columnar low-velocity anomaly was imaged in the crust and uppermost mantle beneath the Wushi Sag (WSS), Beibu Gulf, potentially suggesting that the center of either one branch or the entirety of the Hainan mantle plume impacts the crust here. This low-velocity anomaly is overlaid by a local Moho deepening, indicative of underplating beneath the existing crust. The Maanling–Leihuling Volcanic Field (MLVF) in northern Hainan Island, previously considered the center of the hotspot, does not exhibit such distinct velocity anomalies. Instead, subtle lower crustal anomalies beneath the MLVF are linked with the upper mantle low-velocity zone beneath the WSS. Additionally, the high-conductivity bodies beneath the MLVF indicate lateral magma transport. Earthquake swarms and deep-seated seismic events beneath the WSS further support the presence of magmatic processes. This study indicates that in the Lei–Qiong region, the interaction of the continental crust with the mantle plume centered in the WSS results in magma exhibiting both vertical ascent and lateral migration, leading to a dual low-velocity shear wave pattern in the upper crust, which significantly influences the surface volcanic activity.
Title: The Magmatic Patterns Formed by the Interaction of the Hainan Mantle Plume and Lei–Qiong Crust Revealed through Seismic Ambient Noise Imaging
Description:
Magmatism on continental lithospheres induced by mantle plumes is more complex compared to oceanic intraplate volcanism owing to the heterogeneous nature of continental crustal and lithospheric structures.
Substantial evidence points to the deep-oriented Hainan mantle plume beneath the Lei–Qiong region, the southernmost of the South China block.
In this study, we present a detailed shear wave velocity model of the crust and uppermost mantle in the Lei–Qiong volcanic region, derived from 3-year seismic data (2016–2018) from 34 stations and the use of the ambient noise tomography method.
An evident columnar low-velocity anomaly was imaged in the crust and uppermost mantle beneath the Wushi Sag (WSS), Beibu Gulf, potentially suggesting that the center of either one branch or the entirety of the Hainan mantle plume impacts the crust here.
This low-velocity anomaly is overlaid by a local Moho deepening, indicative of underplating beneath the existing crust.
The Maanling–Leihuling Volcanic Field (MLVF) in northern Hainan Island, previously considered the center of the hotspot, does not exhibit such distinct velocity anomalies.
Instead, subtle lower crustal anomalies beneath the MLVF are linked with the upper mantle low-velocity zone beneath the WSS.
Additionally, the high-conductivity bodies beneath the MLVF indicate lateral magma transport.
Earthquake swarms and deep-seated seismic events beneath the WSS further support the presence of magmatic processes.
This study indicates that in the Lei–Qiong region, the interaction of the continental crust with the mantle plume centered in the WSS results in magma exhibiting both vertical ascent and lateral migration, leading to a dual low-velocity shear wave pattern in the upper crust, which significantly influences the surface volcanic activity.
Related Results
Hafnium isotopic record of crustal maturation during Middle Triassic magmatism in the Southern Alps (Italy)
Hafnium isotopic record of crustal maturation during Middle Triassic magmatism in the Southern Alps (Italy)
<p>Tracing the origin and evolution of magmas on their pathway through the lithosphere is key to understanding the magmatic processes that eventually produce eruption...
Flexure Modeling of Plume Ascension on Mars
Flexure Modeling of Plume Ascension on Mars
Near the equator of Mars, between the branched valleys of Noctis Labyrinthus and Valles Marineris, a large rift system, lies a heavily fractured and eroded region, whose tectonic h...
Slab-Plume Interaction Arrests the Ascent of the Hainan Plume
Slab-Plume Interaction Arrests the Ascent of the Hainan Plume
Volcanic hotspots are commonly attributed to hot mantle plumes rooted at the core-mantle boundary. Yet the absence of expected surface signatures at some hotspots challenges this c...
Gold Content of Mantle‐Derived Rocks from Eastern China and Its Implications
Gold Content of Mantle‐Derived Rocks from Eastern China and Its Implications
Abstract We have analyzed the gold content of 65 samples of mantle‐derived xenoliths and their host rocks from eastern China, which is found to be inhomogeneous, falling in the ran...
Seismic anisotropy and velocity structure in North Island, New Zealand
Seismic anisotropy and velocity structure in North Island, New Zealand
<p>This thesis investigates crustal and upper mantle seismic anisotropy, via shear wave splitting (SWS) analysis, across the Hikurangi subduction zone of the North Island, Ne...
Numerical modeling of the formation of extensive intraplate volcanism
Numerical modeling of the formation of extensive intraplate volcanism
The occurrence of mantle melting is generally attributed to high temperature, decreased pressure, and/or the presence of volatiles such as water. Volcanism away from plate boundari...
Geochronology and Geochemistry of Mafic Dikes from Hainan Island and Tectonic Implications
Geochronology and Geochemistry of Mafic Dikes from Hainan Island and Tectonic Implications
Abstract:In the present study, the major and trace element compositions, as well as Sr, Nd isotopic compositions and K‐Ar age data in mafic dikes from Hainan Island, China, have be...
Aspects of the petrology and geochemistry of the Huckleberry Ridge Tuff, Yellowstone
Aspects of the petrology and geochemistry of the Huckleberry Ridge Tuff, Yellowstone
<p>Silicic (i.e. dacitic-rhyolitic) magmatic systems have the potential to generate large, explosive caldera-forming eruptions which have global effects and consequences. How...

