TY - JOUR
T1 - Crustal structure and origin of the Eggvin Bank west of Jan Mayen, NE Atlantic
AU - Tan, Pingchuan
AU - Breivik, Asbjørn Johan
AU - Trønnes, Reidar G.
AU - Mjelde, Rolf
AU - Azuma, Ryosuke
AU - Eide, Sigurd
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank the crew of the Norwegian research ship, Håkon Mosby, and the technical staff and researchers involved in the East Greenland 2011 Survey. The Centre for Earth Evolution and Dynamics (CEED) is funded by CoE-grant 223272 from the Research Council of Norway. The data for this paper can be obtained by contacting authors Tan, Breivik, or Mjelde at their respective institutions. Two anonymous reviewers provided valuable comments and suggestions to improve the original manuscript.
Publisher Copyright:
©2016. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2017/1/1
Y1 - 2017/1/1
N2 - The Eggvin Bank, located between the Jan Mayen Island and Greenland, is an unusually shallow area containing several submarine volcanic peaks, confined by two transforms on the Northern Kolbeinsey Ridge (NKR). We represent P and S wave velocity models for the Eggvin Bank based on an Ocean Bottom Seismometer profile collected in 2011, showing igneous crustal thickness variations from 8 km to 13 km. A 2–5 km increase is associated with two separate 20–30 km wide segments under the main seamounts. The oceanic crust has three layers: upper crust (L2A: 2.8–4.8 km/s), middle crust (L2B: 5.5–6.5 km/s), and lower crust (L3: 6.7–7.35 km/s). Both the thick layer 2(A/B) and the high ratio of layer 2(A/B) thickness to total crustal thickness indicate that secondary, intraplate magmatism built the seamounts of the Eggvin Bank. The seamount in the north where the crust is thickest has a flat top indicating subaerial exposure but is deeper than those with rounded tops in the south and is therefore probably older. Comparing lower crustal seismic velocity with crustal thickness also indicates that the degree of mantle melting may be higher in the north than in the south. An enriched mantle source presently feeds the NKR magmatism and probably influenced the Eggvin Bank development also at earlier times. To what extent the Eggvin Bank has been influenced by the Iceland plume is uncertain, both an enriched mantle component and elevated mantle temperature may have played a role at different times and locations.
AB - The Eggvin Bank, located between the Jan Mayen Island and Greenland, is an unusually shallow area containing several submarine volcanic peaks, confined by two transforms on the Northern Kolbeinsey Ridge (NKR). We represent P and S wave velocity models for the Eggvin Bank based on an Ocean Bottom Seismometer profile collected in 2011, showing igneous crustal thickness variations from 8 km to 13 km. A 2–5 km increase is associated with two separate 20–30 km wide segments under the main seamounts. The oceanic crust has three layers: upper crust (L2A: 2.8–4.8 km/s), middle crust (L2B: 5.5–6.5 km/s), and lower crust (L3: 6.7–7.35 km/s). Both the thick layer 2(A/B) and the high ratio of layer 2(A/B) thickness to total crustal thickness indicate that secondary, intraplate magmatism built the seamounts of the Eggvin Bank. The seamount in the north where the crust is thickest has a flat top indicating subaerial exposure but is deeper than those with rounded tops in the south and is therefore probably older. Comparing lower crustal seismic velocity with crustal thickness also indicates that the degree of mantle melting may be higher in the north than in the south. An enriched mantle source presently feeds the NKR magmatism and probably influenced the Eggvin Bank development also at earlier times. To what extent the Eggvin Bank has been influenced by the Iceland plume is uncertain, both an enriched mantle component and elevated mantle temperature may have played a role at different times and locations.
KW - Eggvin Bank
KW - Iceland Plume
KW - V and V model
KW - seismic refraction
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U2 - 10.1002/2016JB013495
DO - 10.1002/2016JB013495
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85013230647
SN - 2169-9313
VL - 122
SP - 43
EP - 62
JO - Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth
JF - Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth
IS - 1
ER -