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SDLRC - Plume


The Sheahan Diamond Literature Reference Compilation - Scientific and Media Articles based on Major Keyword - Plume
The Sheahan Diamond Literature Reference Compilation is compiled by Patricia Sheahan who publishes on a monthly basis a list of new scientific articles related to diamonds as well as media coverage and corporate announcements called the Sheahan Diamond Literature Service that is distributed as a free pdf to a list of followers. Pat has kindly agreed to allow her work to be made available as an online digital resource at Kaiser Research Online so that a broader community interested in diamonds and related geology can benefit. The references are for personal use information purposes only; when available a link is provided to an online location where the full article can be accessed or purchased directly. Reproduction of this compilation in part or in whole without permission from the Sheahan Diamond Literature Service is strictly prohibited. Return to Diamond Keyword Index
Sheahan Diamond Literature Reference Compilation - Scientific Articles by Author for all years
A-An Ao+ B-Bd Be-Bk Bl-Bq Br+ C-Cg Ch-Ck Cl+ D-Dd De-Dn Do+ E F-Fn Fo+ G-Gh Gi-Gq Gr+ H-Hd He-Hn Ho+ I J K-Kg Kh-Kn Ko-Kq Kr+ L-Lh
Li+ M-Maq Mar-Mc Md-Mn Mo+ N O P-Pd Pe-Pn Po+ Q R-Rh Ri-Rn Ro+ S-Sd Se-Sh Si-Sm Sn-Ss St+ T-Th Ti+ U V W-Wg Wh+ X Y Z
Sheahan Diamond Literature Reference Compilation - Media/Corporate References by Name for all years
A B C D-Diam Diamonds Diamr+ E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Each article reference in the SDLRC is tagged with one or more key words assigned by Pat Sheahan to highlight the main topics of the article. In an effort to make it easier for users to track down articles related to a specific topic, KRO has extracted these key words and developed a list of major key words presented in this Key Word Index to which individual key words used in the article reference have been assigned. In most of the individual Key Word Reports the references are in crhonological order, though in some such as Deposits the order is first by key word and then chronological. Only articles classified as "technical" (mainly scientific journal articles) and "media" (independent media articles) are included in the Key Word Index. References that were added in the most recent monthly update are highlighted in yellow.

The key word Plume refers to a "hotspot" at the earth's surface which is not related to the volcanic activity associated with subduction zones where oceanic plate descends beneath continental crust, but rather with a giant "pipe" of magma far from the edges of plates. That makes them much more interesting than magmatism at plate boundaries, for their existence is not explained by plate tectonics. Mantle plumes seem to have their origin at the boundary between the earth's core and the mantle, and persist for very long time periods. They can be observed at the earth's surface as a "track", a wandering hotspot which is an illusion created by the movement of oceanic and continental plates on the surface of the mantle. Two famous contemporary mantle plumes are Iceland and Yellowstone Park. Mantle plumes are relevant to diamonds in an unhappy way. It is as if a very angry Hephaestus exiled to Hades has set up a giant stationary blow torch which scorches anything that moves into its path. This matters to diamonds because they grow within the diamond stability field that exists within the deep roots of cratons, continental plates with thick roots protected from the magmatism at the margins created by subduction and collisions. Diamonds end up at the earth's surface when the mantle spawns discrete, fast moving magma pulses which entrain material within the cratonic roots and erupt as kimberlite pipes. A mantle plume, however, moves through a craton laterally, not as a hot physical mass, but as a giant heat ray. While the pressure may remain the same at the various depths of a craton, the temperature will change. Diamonds that may have formed during the Archean age and have been contentedly stable since then will be transformed into graphite when the temperature of their nest changes. Because the pressure and temperature at the earth's surface is different from the diamond stability field that exists within a cratonic root, one would expect diamonds to convert into graphite. The reason they do not has something to do with kinetic energy which enables Diamonds to Last Forever. Any kimberlite which emplaced before the "arrival" of a mantle plume could be chock full of diamonds, but those which erupted after the blow-torch of Hephaestus "passed through", will be barren, though sometimes there will be octagonal "shapes" of graphite within xenoliths found in a kimberlite. Plume articles tend to be of a scientific nature and are interesting because what exactly causes mantle plumes is not decided science.

Plume
Posted/
Published
AuthorTitleSourceRegionKeywords
DS1990-0819
1990
Kellogg, L.H., Wasserburg, G.J.The role of plumes in mantle helium fluxesEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 99, pp. 276-289GlobalMantle, Plumes
DS1990-1011
1990
McDougall, T.J.Bulk properties of hot smoker plumesEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 99, pp. 185-194GlobalGeochemistry, Mantle plumes
DS1990-1135
1990
Olson, P.Hot spots, swells and mantle plumesRyan, M.P., Magma Transport and storage, pp. 33-51MantleHot spots, Mantle plumes, models
DS1990-1429
1990
Summerfield, M.A.Geomorphology and mantle plumesNature, Vol. 344, No. 6165, March 29, pp. 388GlobalGeomorphology, Mantle plumes
DS1991-0205
1991
Caldeira, K., Rampino, M.R.The Mid Cretaceous super plume: carbon dioxide, and global warmingGeol. Res. Let., Vol. 18, No. 6, June pp. 987-90.MantlePlumes
DS1991-0224
1991
Carlson, R.W.Physical and chemical evidence on the cause and source characteristics of flood basalt volcanism.Australian Journal of Earth Sciences, Vol. 38, pp. 525-44.MantlePlumes, Magma - flood basalts - not specific to diamonds
DS1991-0537
1991
Garvin, L.Mantle plumes: smoke signals from the deepNature, Vol. 351, No. 6329, June 27, pp. 699-701GlobalMantle, Plumes
DS1991-0614
1991
Griffiths, R.W., Campbell, I.H.On the dynamics of long lived plume conduits in the convecting mantleEarth Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 103, No. 1-4, April pp. 214-227GlobalMantle, Plumes
DS1991-0644
1991
Haggerty, S.E.Emplacement and implications of ultra-deep xenoliths and diamonds from the transition zoneProceedings of Fifth International Kimberlite Conference held Araxa June 1991, Servico Geologico do Brasil (CPRM) Special, pp. 157-159South AfricaPlumes, Mantle, genesis, tectonics
DS1991-0714
1991
Hill, R.I., Campbell, I.H., Griffiths, R.W.Plume tectonics and the development of stable continental crustAustralian Society of Exploration Geophysicists and Geological Society of, Vol. 22, No. 1, March pp. 185-188AustraliaMantle, Plumes
DS1991-0854
1991
Kerr, R.A.Do plumes stir earths entire mantle?Science, Vol. 252, No. 5009, May 24, p. 1068GlobalMantle, Plumes
DS1991-0956
1991
Larson, R.L.Latest pulse of earth: evidence for a mid-Cretaceous superplumeGeology, Vol. 19, No. 6, June pp. 547-550GlobalEarth, Superplume
DS1991-0957
1991
Larson, R.L.Geological consequences of superplumesGeology, Vol. 19, No. 10, October pp. 963-966GlobalSuperplumes, Pulsation tectonics
DS1991-0958
1991
Larson, R.L., Olson, P.Mantle plumes control magnetic reversal frequencyEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 107, No. 3/4, December pp. 437-447MantlePlumes, Geophysics -magnetics
DS1991-0967
1991
Leat, P.T., Thompson, R.N., Morrison, M.A., Hendry, G.L., DickinAlkaline hybrid mafic magmas of the Yampa area, northwest Colorado, and their relationship to the Yellowstone mantle plume and lithospheric mantle domainsContributions to Mineralogy and Petrology, Vol. 107, No. 3, pp. 310-327ColoradoAlkaline rocks, Mantle plumes
DS1991-1012
1991
Loper, D.E.Mantle plumesTectonophysics, Vol. 187, pp. 373-384GlobalMantle, Plumes
DS1991-1146
1991
Mian Liu, Chase, C.G.Boundary layer model of mantle plumes with thermal and chemical diffusion and bouyancyGeophys. Journal of International, Vol. 104, pp. 433-440HawaiiMantle plumes, Hot spot
DS1991-1223
1991
Neavel, K.E., Johnson, A.M.Entrainment in compositionally bouyant plumesTectonophysics, Vol. 200, pp. 1-15GlobalPlumes, Experimental petrology
DS1991-1724
1991
Thompson, R.N., Gibson, S.A.Subcontinental mantle plumes, hotspots and pre-existing thinspotsJournal of the Geological Society of London, Vol. 248, November pp. 973-977MantlePlumes, Hotspots
DS1991-1848
1991
Westaway, R.Discussion of and correction to: deformation of the northeast Basin and RangeProvince: the response of the lithosphere to the Yellowknife plume?Geophys. Journal of Int, Vol. 104, pp. 647-659NevadaMantle plumes, Tectonics
DS1991-1895
1991
Wyllie, P.J.Magmatic consequences of volatile fluxes from the mantlePerchuk, L.L. Progress in metamorphic and magmatic petrology, Cambridge, Chapter 18, pp. 477-503MantlePlumes, Kimberlite petrogenesis
DS1992-0027
1992
Anderson, D.L., Zhang, Y., Tanimoto, T.Plume heads, continental lithosphere, flood basalts and tomographyStorey ed. Geological Society of London Special Paper, No. 68, pp. 99-124.MantleHot spots, plumes, volcanism.
DS1992-0116
1992
Bercovici, D.Wave dynamics in mantle plume heads and hotspot swellsGeophysical Research Letters, Vol. 19, No. 17, September 4, pp. 1791-1794MantleMantle plumes, Hotspots
DS1992-0308
1992
Cox, K.G.Karoo igneous activity, and the early stages of the break-up SOURCE[ Geological Society Special Publication Magmatism and the causes of the continentalBreak-up, editor Storey, B.C. et al.Geological Society Special Publication Magmatism and the causes of the continental, No. 68, pp. 137-148Africa, BrazilBasalt, Mantle plumes
DS1992-0309
1992
Cox, K.G.Karoo igneous activity, and the early stages of the break-up ofGondwanalandGeological Society Special Publication, Magmatism and the Causes of Continental, No. 68, pp. 137-148Africa, BrazilMantle, Plumes
DS1992-0354
1992
Deng Jinfu, Zhao Hailing, Lai Shaocong, Molan, E., Lou Zaohua, Mo XuanxueThe mantle plume beneath the northern part of Chin a continentInternational Symposium Cenozoic Volcanic Rocks Deep seated xenoliths China and its, Abstracts pp. 15ChinaMantle, Plume
DS1992-0439
1992
Erickson, S.G., Arkani-Hamed, J.Impingement of mantle plumes on the lithosphere: contrast between earth andVenusGeophysical Research Letters, Vol. 19, No. 9, May 4, pp. 885-888MantleLithosphere, Plumes
DS1992-0498
1992
Fuller, M., Weeks, R.Geomagnetism: superplumes and superchronsNature, Vol. 356, No. 6364, March 5, p. 16GlobalMantle, Superplumes
DS1992-0499
1992
Fuller, M., Weeks, R.Superplumes and superchronsNature, Vol. 356, No. 6364, March 5, pp. 16-17MantleGeochronology, Superplumes
DS1992-0567
1992
Gill, R.C.O., Pedersen, A.K., Larsen, J.G.Tertiary picrites in West Greenland: melting at the periphery of a plume?Geological Society Special Publication, Magmatism and the Causes of Continental, No. 68, pp. 335-348GreenlandPicrites, Plume
DS1992-0646
1992
Haggerty, S.E.Superplumes, superchrons and superkimberlitesEos Transactions, Vol. 73, No. 14, April 7, supplement abstracts p.325MantleKimberlites, Superplumes
DS1992-0709
1992
Hill, R.I., Campbell, I.H., Davies, G.F., Griffiths, R.W.Mantle plumes, continental magmatism and tectonicsEos Transactions, Vol. 73, No. 14, April 7, supplement abstracts p.326MantleTectonics, Plumes
DS1992-0721
1992
Holm, P.M., Gill, R.C.O., Pedersen, A.K., Larsen, J.G., Hald, N.The Icelandic mantle plume: compositional constraints from the West Greenland Tertiary picritesEos Transactions, Vol. 73, No. 14, April 7, supplement abstracts p.336GreenlandPicrites, Mantle plume
DS1992-0989
1992
Manga, M., O'Connell, R.J., Stone, H.A.Effect of boundaries and compositional layering in the mantle on the ascent of mantle plumesEos Transactions, Vol. 73, No. 14, April 7, supplement abstracts p. 297MantlePlumes
DS1992-1140
1992
Olson, P.Superplumes from the deep mantleEos Transactions, Vol. 73, No. 2, Jan. 14, p. 22MantleSuperplumes
DS1992-1331
1992
Saunders, A.D., Storey, M., Kent, R.W., Norry, M.J.Consequences of plume-lithosphere interactionsGeological Society Special Publication, Magmatism and the Causes of, No. 68, pp. 41-60GlobalMantle, Java Plateau, Plumes
DS1992-1332
1992
Saunders, A.D., Storey, M., Kent, R.W., Norry, M.J.Consequences of plume-lithosphere interactionsGeological Society Special Publication, Magmatism and the Causes of Continental, No. 68, pp. 41-60.GlobalMantle, Plumes
DS1992-1424
1992
Sleep, H.H.Time dependence of mantle plumes: some simple theoryJournal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 97, No. B13, December 10, pp. 19, 993-20-006GlobalHot spots, Mantle, Plumes
DS1992-1426
1992
Sleep, N.H.Time dependence of mantle plumes: some simple theoryJournal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 97, No. B13, December 10, pp. 20, 007-20.020.MantlePlumes, Hot spots
DS1992-1430
1992
Smith, A.D.The generation of mantle plume signatures in the lithosphere-asthenospheresystemEos Transactions, Vol. 73, No. 14, April 7, supplement abstracts p. 304MantlePlumes
DS1992-1471
1992
Steinberger, B.Tracing hotspot plumes to their origin on the CMBEos Transactions, Vol. 73, No. 14, April 7, supplement abstracts p. 303MantleCore-mantle-boundary, Plumes
DS1992-1519
1992
Tarney, J.Geochemistry and significance of mafic dyke swarms in the ProterozoicProterozoic Crustal Evolution, K.C. Condie, Developments in Precambrian, Chapter 4, pp. 151-180.MantleDyke swarms, Mantle plumes
DS1993-0260
1993
Class, C., Goldstein, S.L., Galer, S.J.G.Young formation age of a mantle plume sourceNature, Vol. 362, No. 6422, April 22, pp. 715-721MantleHot spot, Plume, Geochronology
DS1993-0361
1993
Dobretsov, N.L., Kirdyashkin, A.G.Application of two layer convection to structural features and geodynamics of the earthRussian Geology and Geophysics, Vol. 34, No. 1, pp. 1-21RussiaStructure, Plumes, models, lithosphere, Mantle
DS1993-0362
1993
Dobretsov, N.L., Kirdyashkin, A.G., Gladkov, I.N.Problems of deep seated geodynamics and modelling of mantle plumesRussian Geology and Geophysics, Vol. 34, No. 12, pp. 3-20.MantleGeodynamics, Mantle plumes
DS1993-0672
1993
Hill, R.I.Mantle plumes and continental tectonicsLithos, Vol. 30, No. 3-4, September pp. 193-206.MantlePlumes, Tectonics
DS1993-0696
1993
Honda, S., Yuen, D.A., Balachandar, S., Reuteler, D.Three-dimensional instabilities of mantle convection with multiple phasetransitionsScience, Vol. 259, February 26, pp. 1308-1311MantlePlumes, Tectonics
DS1993-0863
1993
Kumarapeli, P.S.A plume generated segment of the rifted margin of Laurentia, Southern Canadian Appalachians Wilson Cycle.Tectonophysics, Vol. 219, pp. 47-55.OntarioTectonics - rifting, Wilson Cycle, mantle plumes
DS1993-0883
1993
Larson, R.L.Mantle plumes and magnetic reversals: a surprising linkEos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union, Vol. 74, No. 4, January 26, p. 46MantleGeophysics -magnetics, Plumes
DS1993-0916
1993
LithosEarth and carbon cycles, geochronology, Archean, komatiites, ocean-crust, Superior, LithoprobeLithos, Vol. 30, No. 3-4, September, pp. 191-420MantleBook -table of contents, Mantle plumes, geochemistry
DS1993-1072
1993
Morgan, J.P., Shearer, P.M.Seismic constraints on mantle flow and topography of the 660 kmdiscontinuty: evidence for whole mantle convection.Nature, Vol. 365, October 7, pp. 506-511.MantleGeophysics -seismics, Mantle convection patterns, mantle plumes
DS1993-1342
1993
Rubin, K., Mahoney, J.What's on the plume channel?Nature, Vol. 362, m March 11, pp. 109-110GlobalHot spots, Mantle, Plumes
DS1993-1429
1993
Seyler, M., Mattson, P.H.Gabbroic and pyroxenite layers in the Tinaquillo peridotite: succession of melt intrusions in a rising mantle diapir.Journal of Geology, Vol. 101, pp. 501-11.VenezuelaPlumes, Peridotite - alpine type
DS1993-1527
1993
Stein, M., Hofmann, A.W.Fossil plume head beneath the Arabian lithosphereEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 114, pp. 193-209.GlobalMantle plumes, Tectonics, geochemistry
DS1993-1542
1993
Stothers, R.B.Hotspots and sunspots: surface tracers of deep mantle convection in the earth and Sun.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 116, No. 1-4, April pp. 1-8.MantleHotspots, Plumes, Mantle
DS1993-1637
1993
Vacquier, V.Large hot mantle plumes create oceanic lithosphereAmerican Geophysical Union, EOS, supplement Abstract Volume, October, Vol. 74, No. 43, October 26, abstract p. 598.MantleOceanic lithosphere, Mantle plumes
DS1993-1711
1993
Westaway, R.Forces associated with mantle plumesEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 119, No. 3, September pp. 311-348MantlePlumes, Tectonics
DS1993-1712
1993
Westaway, R.Forces associated with mantle plumesEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 119, No. 3, September pp. 331-348.MantlePlumes, Tectonics
DS1993-1720
1993
White, R.S.Melt production in mantle plumesPhilosophical Transactions Royal Society of London, Section A, Vol. 342, pp. 137-153HawaiiGeophysics - seismics, Reunion plume, Deccan flood basalts
DS1993-1721
1993
White, R.S.Melt production rates in mantle plumesRoyal Society Transactions, Physical Sciences, Ser. A, Vol. 342, No. 1663, January 15, pp. 137-153.MantlePlumes, Reunion plume
DS1993-1721
1993
White, R.S.Melt production rates in mantle plumesRoyal Society Transactions, Physical Sciences, Ser. A, Vol. 342, No. 1663, January 15, pp. 137-153.MantlePlumes, Reunion plume
DS1993-1724
1993
White, W.M.Evidence from mantle plumes for deep mantle recyclingAmerican Geophysical Union, EOS, supplement Abstract Volume, October, Vol. 74, No. 43, October 26, abstract p. 557.MantleMantle plumes
DS1993-1744
1993
Windley, B.F., Allen, M.B.Mongolian plateau: evidence for a late Cenozoic mantle plume under centralAsia.Geology, Vol. 21, No. 4, April pp. 295-298.GlobalMantle plume, Rifting, Tectonics
DS1993-1762
1993
Woods, A.W.A model of the plumes above basaltic fissure eruptionsGeophysical Research Letters, Vol. 20, No. 12, June 18, pp. 1115-1118.MantlePlumes
DS1993-1763
1993
Woods, A.W.A model of the plumes above basaltic eruptionsGeophysical Research Letters, Vol. 20, No. 12, June 18, pp. 1115-1118MantlePlumes, Model
DS1993-1779
1993
Wysession, M.E.How the core and mantle may produce mantle plumesEos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union, Vol. 74, No. 4, January 26, p. 46.MantleCore, Plumes
DS1994-0048
1994
Anderson, D.L.Komatiites and picrites: evidence that the plume source is depletedEarth Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 128, No. 3-4, Dec. pp. 303-312MantleKomatiites, Plume, hot spots
DS1994-0247
1994
Campbell, I.H.The role of mantle plumes in crustal evolutionGeological Society of Australia Abstract Volume, No. 37, pp. 52-53.MantlePlumes, Tectonics
DS1994-0353
1994
Cox, K.G.Sources of basaltic magmasInternational Symposium Upper Mantle, Aug. 14-19, 1994, pp. 85-94.MantleBasalts, Plumes, flood
DS1994-0385
1994
Davies, G.F.Mantle plumes and heating, uplift and subsidence of continental crustGeological Society of Australia Abstract Volume, No. 37, pp. 80.MantlePlumes
DS1994-0386
1994
Davies, G.F.Thermomechanical erosion of the lithosphere by mantle plumesJournal of Geophy. Res., Vol. 99, No.B8, August 10, pp. 15, 709-722.MantlePlumes, Geothermometry
DS1994-0566
1994
Gallagher, K., Hawkesworth, C.Mantle plumes, continental magmatism and asymmetry in the South AtlanticEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 123, pp. 105-17.GlobalPlumes, Magmatism
DS1994-0620
1994
Gibson, S.A., Thompson, R.N., Leonardos, O.H., Dickin, A.The late Cretaceous impact of the Trindade plume: evidence from large volume mafic potassic magmatism.International Symposium Upper Mantle, Aug. 14-19, 1994, Extended abstracts pp. 56-58.BrazilMantle plume, Alkaline rocks
DS1994-0725
1994
Hart, S.R.Mantle plumes and other mail from the mantleMineralogical Magazine, Vol. 58A, pp. 382-383. AbstractMantlePlumes, Dupal anomaly
DS1994-0736
1994
Hauri, E.Extremely depleted peridotite xenoliths from Islands of the Samoa and Macdonald hotspots, Pacific Ocean.Eos, Vol. 75, No. 16, April 19, p. 191.GlobalXenoliths, Mantle plumes
DS1994-0743
1994
Hawkesworth, C., Gallagher, K., Turner, S.Causes of melt generation in the sub-continental mantleMineralogical Magazine, Vol. 58A, pp. 394-395. AbstractMantleMantle plumes, Magma
DS1994-0744
1994
Hawkesworth, C., Turner, S.The composition of the sub-continental mantle: evidence from magmaticrocks.Mineralogical Magazine, Vol. 58A, pp. 396-397. AbstractMantleMantle plumes, Magma
DS1994-0962
1994
Kumazawa, M., Maruyama, S.Whole earth tectonicsJournal of the Geological Society of Japan, Vol. 100, No. 1, January pp. 81-102MantleTectonics, Plumes
DS1994-0963
1994
Kumazawa, M., Maruyama, S.Whole earth tectonicsJournal of the Geological Society of Japan, Vol. 100, No. 1, January pp. 81-102.MantleTectonics, Plumes
DS1994-0982
1994
Lange, R.Subcontinental lithosphere: preservation of complex interactions, asthenospheric plumes and subducted slabs.Eos, Vol. 75, No. 16, April 19, p. 188.MantlePlumes, Subduction
DS1994-1108
1994
Marques, L.S., Piccirillo, E.M.What was the role of Tristan da Cunha mantle plume in the Parana flood basalt generation?International Symposium Upper Mantle, Aug. 14-19, 1994, Extended abstracts pp. 49-51.BrazilMagma, Mantle plume
DS1994-1128
1994
Matyska, C., Moser, J., Yuen, D.A.The potential influence of radiative heat transfer on the formation of megaplumes in the lower mantle.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 125, pp. 255-266.MantlePlumes, Heat transfer
DS1994-1276
1994
Nicolas, A., Boudier, F/., Ildefonse, B.Evidence from the Oman ophiolite for active mantle upwelling beneath a fast spreading ridgeNature, Vol. 370, No. 6484, July 7, pp.51-53OmanOphiolite, Plumes
DS1994-1341
1994
Parsons, T., Thompson, G.A., Sleep, N.H.Mantle plume influence on the Neogene uplift and extension of the U.S.western Cordillera?Geology, Vol. 22, No. 1, January pp. 83-86.Cordillera, WashingtonYellowstone hot spot, Mantle plumes
DS1994-1455
1994
Ribe, N.M., Christensen, U.R.Three dimensional modeling of plume lithosphere interactionJournal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 99, No. B 1, January 10, pp. 669-682HawaiiTectonics, Plume
DS1994-1456
1994
Ribe, N.M., Christensen, U.R.Three dimensional modeling of plume lithosphere interactionJournal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 99, No. B 1, January 10, pp. 669-682.Hawaii, MantleTectonics, Hot Spots, Plume
DS1994-1624
1994
Sleep, N.H.Lithospheric thinning by midplate mantle plumes, thermal history of hotplume material ponded at depths.Journal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 99, No. B5, May 10, pp. 9327-9344.MantlePlumes, Lithosphere -sublithosphere
DS1994-1687
1994
Stein, M., Hofmann, A.W.Mantle plumes and episodic crustal growthNature, Vol. 372, No. 6501, Nov. 3, pp. 63-67MantlePlumes
DS1994-1720
1994
Sutherland, F.L.Extended mantle plume and flow systems and lithospheric interactions:Australian and Antarctic plates.Geological Society of Australia Abstract Volume, No. 37, pp. 424.Australia, AntarcticaMantle, Geodynamics, Plumes
DS1994-1721
1994
Sutherland, F.L.volcanism around the K/T boundary time -its role in an impact scenario For the K/T extinction eventsEarth Science Reviews, Vol. 36, No. 1, pp. 1-26GlobalPlatinum Group Elements, Mantle plumes
DS1994-1866
1994
Vogel, S.The big rush... superhot rocks in the earth's mantle...toward the coreEarth, Vol. 3, No. 2, March pp. 39-43MantleMantle plumes, hot spots, Core
DS1994-1867
1994
Vogel, S.The big rush... superhot rocks in the earth's mantle...toward the coreEarth, Vol. 3, No. 2, March pp. 39-43.MantleMantle plumes, hot spots, Core
DS1994-1897
1994
Weinberg, R.F., Podiadchikov, Y.Diapiric ascent of magmas through power law crust and mantleJournal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 99, No. B5, May 10, pp. 9543-9560.MantleMagmas, Plumes, volcanism
DS1995-0097
1995
Baldridge, W.S., Keller, G.R., Braile, L.W.Continental rifting: a final perspectiveContinental Rifts: evolution, structure, tectonics, No. 25, pp. 453-461MantleMagmatism, mantle plumes, MOHO, Tectonics
DS1995-0098
1995
Baldridge, W.S., Keller, G.R., Braile, L.W.Continental rifting: a final perspectiveContinental Rifts: evolution, structure, tectonics, No. 25, pp. 453-461.MantleMagmatism, mantle plumes, MOHO, Tectonics
DS1995-0116
1995
Basu, A.R.rare earth elements (REE) geochemistry of the Siberian mantle plumesEos, Vol. 76, No. 46, Nov. 7. p.F693. Abstract.Russia, SiberiaMantle, Plumes
DS1995-0151
1995
Bird, J.M.Mantle dustGeological Society of America (GSA) Abstracts, Vol. 27, No. 6, abstract p. A 242.MantlePlumes
DS1995-0270
1995
Carlson, R.W, Shirey, S.B., Pearson, D.G., Boyd, F.R.The mantle beneath continentsCarnegie Institution Yearbook 93 for 1993-1994., pp. 109-119.South Africa, Russia, SiberiaMantle, Plumes, keels
DS1995-0303
1995
Chemical GeologySpecial issue: Mafic magmatism through timeChemical Geology, Vol. 126, No. 1, Nov. 20, pp. 1-80QuebecBook -table of contents, Abitibi, mantle plumes, komatiites, crust, hydration
DS1995-0364
1995
Cox, K.G., McKenzie, D.P., White, R.S.Melting and melt movement in the earthOxford University of Press, 240p. approx. $ 60.00MantleMelt, mantle plume, Book -ad
DS1995-0380
1995
Dalziel, I.W.D., Lawver, L.A.Plumes and dynamics of supercontinental fragmentationEos, Vol. 76, No. 46, Nov. 7. p.F172. Abstract.MantlePlumes, Gondwana
DS1995-0390
1995
Davies, G.F.Penetration of plates and plumes through the mantle transition zoneEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 133, No. 3-4, July 15, pp. 507-516.MantlePlumes
DS1995-0391
1995
Davies, G.F.Penetration of plates and plumes through the mantle transition zoneEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 133, No. 3-4, July 15, pp. 507-516MantlePlumes, Tectonics
DS1995-0508
1995
Ernst, R.E., Buchan, K.L., Palmer, H.C.The global mafic dyke GIS database: a tool for reconstructing paleo continents -mapping mantle plumesGeological Association of Canada (GAC)/Mineralogical Association of Canada (MAC) Annual Meeting Abstracts, Vol. 20, p. A29 AbstractCanada, Northwest TerritoriesMantle plumes, Dyke swarms
DS1995-0634
1995
Gill, R.C.O., Holm, P.M., Nielsen, T.F.D.Was a short lived Baffin Bay plume active prior to initiation of the present Icelandic plume? Clues ..Lithos, Vol. 34, No. 1-3, Jan. pp. 27-40GreenlandPicrite -magnesiuM., Plume
DS1995-0747
1995
Hardebeck, J.Eustasy and the Cretaceous Superplume hypothesisEos, Vol. 76, No. 46, Nov. 7. p.F172. Abstract.MantlePlumes, Sea levels
DS1995-0749
1995
Harley, S.L.Tectonics: upwardly mobile hot crustNature, Vol. 375, No. 6531, June 8, p. 451.MantleTectonics, Mantle plume
DS1995-0765
1995
Hart, S.R.Mantle plums and mantle plumes: a chemical geodynamic viewEos, Abstracts, Vol. 76, No. 17, Apr 25, p. S 292.MantlePlumes
DS1995-0790
1995
Herzberg, C.Generation of plume magmas through time: an experimental perspectiveChemical Geology, Vol. 126, No. 1, Nov. 20, pp. 1-16GlobalMagma genesis, Plumes
DS1995-0850
1995
International Geological Correlation Programme (IGCP) ProjectPetrology and metallogeny of volcanic and intrusive rocks of The midcontinent rift system #1International Geological Correlation Programme (IGCP) Project 336 Proceedings Volume Abstracts, 200pIndia, Russia, Spain, Minnesota, Michigan, OntarioTectonics, plumes, magmatism, geodynamics, fluids, Book - table of contents
DS1995-0861
1995
Iwamori, H., McKenzie, D., Takahashi, E.Melt generation by isentropic mantle upwellingEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 134, No. 3-4, Sept. 1, pp. 253-266MantlePlumes, Melts
DS1995-0940
1995
Kerr, A.C., Saunders, A.D., Tarney, J., Berry, N.H., Hards, V.L.Depleted mantle plume geochemical signatures: no paradox for plumetheoriesGeology, Vol. 23, No. 9, Sept. pp. 843-846MantlePlumes, Geochemistry
DS1995-0954
1995
Kincaid, C., Ito, G., Gable, C.Laboratory investigation of the interaction of off axis mantle plumes and spreading centresNature, Vol. 376, No. 6543, Aug. 31, pp. 758-761MantleMantle plumes
DS1995-0955
1995
Kincaid, C., Larson, R.Slab penetration events through 670 and the evolution of plumes:implications for ocean crustal production.Eos, Vol. 76, No. 46, Nov. 7. p.F172. Abstract.MantlePlumes, Subduction
DS1995-1050
1995
Lane-Serff, G.F.Partial recycling in hydrothermal plumes.. commentEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 132, pp. 233-234GlobalPlumes, Hot spots
DS1995-1060
1995
Larson, R.L.The Mid Cretaceous superplume episodeScientific American, Vol. 272, No. 2, Feb. pp. 82-86.MantlePlumes, Cretaceous
DS1995-1118
1995
Lowell, R.P., Rona, P.A., Von Herzen, R.P.Seafloor hydrothermal systemsJournal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 100, No. B1, Jan. 10, pp. 327-352GlobalHydrothermal systems, Plumes
DS1995-1226
1995
Meert, J.G., Toravik, T.H.Superplumes and the breakup of RodiniaEos, Vol. 76, No. 46, Nov. 7. p.F588. Abstract.GondwanaPlumes, Geodynamics, tectonics
DS1995-1300
1995
Morgan, J.P.Hotspot melting generates both hotspot volcanism and a hotspot swell?Journal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 100, No. B5, May 10, pp. 8032-8045.MantlePlumes, Hotspots
DS1995-1566
1995
Reuteler, D.M., Balachander, S., Yuen, D.A.The generation of localized toroidal velocity patches from plume dynamics:implications spinning microplatesEos, Vol. 76, No. 46, Nov. 7. p.F633-4. Abstract.MantlePlumes, Geodynamics, Tectonics
DS1995-1568
1995
Ribe, N.M., Christensen, U.R., TheibingThe dynamics of plume ridge interaction, 1. Ridge centered plumesEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 134, pp. 155-68.MantlePlumes, hot spots, Model - lubrication theory
DS1995-1649
1995
Saltus, R.W., Thompson, G.A.Why is it downhill from Tonopah to Las Vegas? a case for mantle plume support of the high N. Basin and RangeTectonics, Vol. 14, No. 6, Dec. pp. 1235-44NevadaTectonics, Basin and Range, plumes
DS1995-1792
1995
Sobolev, A.V.Melt inclusions as a source of principal petrologic informationEos, Abstracts, Vol. 76, No. 17, Apr 25, p. S 266.MantleMelt, Mantle plumes
DS1995-1837
1995
Storey, B.C.The role of mantle plumes in continental breakup: case histories fromGondwanaland.Nature, Vol. 377, No. 6545, Sept. 28, pp. 301-308.GlobalMantle plumes
DS1995-1838
1995
Storey, B.C.The role of mantle plumes in continental break up: case histories fromGondwanalandNature, Vol. 377, No. 6547, Sept. 28, pp. 301-308MantlePlumes, Supercontinents
DS1995-1871
1995
Tarduno, J.A.Tracking Cretaceous hotspot motionEos, Vol. 76, No. 46, Nov. 7. p.F172. Abstract.MantlePlumes
DS1995-1946
1995
Urabe, T., et al.The effect of magmatic activity on hydrothermal venting along the superfast spreading East Pacific RiseScience, Vol. 269, Aug. 25, pp. 1092-1095MantlePlumes, Magmatism
DS1995-1977
1995
Vaughan, A.P.M.Circum-Pacific mid-Cretaceous deformation and uplift: a superplume relatedevent?Geology, Vol. 23, No. 6, June pp. 491-494Pacific OceanMantle, Superplume, tectonics
DS1995-2054
1995
White, R.S., McKenzie, D.Mantle plumes and flood basaltsJournal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 100, No. 9, Sept. 10, pp. 7543-86MantlePlumes, Flood basalts
DS1995-2145
1995
Zhitkov, A.N.Paleokinetics and pattern of kimberlite fields location on the Siberian Platform based on hypothesis hot spotsProceedings of the Sixth International Kimberlite Conference Abstracts, pp. 692-694.Russia, SiberiaGeodynamics, Hot spots, plumes
DS1996-0002
1996
Abbott, D.H.Plumes and hotspots as sources of greenstone beltsLithos, Vol. 37, No. 2/3, April pp. 113-128MantleGreenstone belts, Plumes, hotspots
DS1996-0012
1996
Albers, M., Christensen, U.R.The excess temperature of plumes rising from the core-mantle boundaryGeophysical Research. Letters, Vol. 23, No. 24, Dec. 1, pp. 3567-70.MantlePlumes, Hotspots
DS1996-0026
1996
Anderson, D.L.Enriched asthenosphere and depleted plumesInternational Geology Review, Vol. 38, No. 1, pp. 1-21.MantlePetrology, Plumes
DS1996-0083
1996
Barley, M.E., et al.The Late Archean bonanza: magmatic, metallogenic and environmental consequences of a superplume?Geological Society of Australia 13th. held Feb, No. 41, abstracts p. 21Australia, CanadaSuperplume, Metallogeny -nickel, copper, sulphides
DS1996-0119
1996
Bercovici, D., Lin, J.A gravity model of cooling mantle plume heads with temperature dependent buoyancy and viscosity.Journal of Geophysics Research, Vol. 101, No. 2, Feb. 10, pp. 3291-MantlePlumes, Geophysics -gravity model
DS1996-0212
1996
Campbell, I.H.The evolution of the mantle's chemical structure #2Geological Society of Australia 13th. Convention held Feb., No. 41, abstracts p.75.MantlePlumes
DS1996-0319
1996
Dabler, R., Yuen, D.A.The metastable olivine wedge in fast subducting slabs: constraints from thermo-kinetic coupling.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 137, No. 1/4, Jan. 1, pp. 109-118.MantleGeodynamics, Subduction, plumes
DS1996-0434
1996
Ernst, G.G.J., Sparks, S.J.Sedimentation from turbulent jets and plumesJournal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 101, No. B 3, March 10, pp. 5575-90GlobalSedimentology, Plumes
DS1996-0523
1996
Gibson, S.A., Thomspon, R.N., Leonardos, O.H.Erratun to high Ti and low Ti mafic potassic magmas: key to plume lithosphere interactions ...Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 141, No. 1-4, June 1, pp. 325-MantleAlkaline rocks, Plumes
DS1996-0597
1996
Hardebeck, J., Anderson, D.L.Eustasy as a test of a Cretaceous superplume hypothesisEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 137, No. 1/4, Jan. 1, pp. 101-108.MantleGeodynamics, Subduction, plumes
DS1996-0613
1996
Hauri, E.Migration of magma from convecting magmaCarnegie Institute Yearbook 94, (1994-1995), pp. 116-128MantlePlate Tectonics, Mantle Plumes
DS1996-0745
1996
Kirdyashkin, A.G., Gladkov, I.N.Mantle plumes and hot spotsDoklady Academy of Sciences, Vol. 343A No. 6, June pp. 26-30.MantlePlumes, Hotspots
DS1996-0823
1996
LeCheminant, A.N., Heaman, L.M., Van Breemen, O., et al.Mafic magmatism, mantle roots and kimberlites in the Slave CratonGeological Survey of Canada, LeCheminant ed, OF 3228, pp. 161-169.Northwest TerritoriesCraton - dykes, plumes, rifting, Mackenzie Dyke swarm
DS1996-1374
1996
Stewart, K., Rogers, N.Mantle plume and lithosphere contributions to basalts from southernEthiopiaEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 140, pp. 195-211GlobalBasalts, Mantle plumes
DS1996-1448
1996
Turner, S., Hawkesworth, C., et al.Mantle plumes, flood basalts, and thermal models for melt generation beneath continents: assessment ParanaJournal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 181, No. B5, May. 10, pp. 11, 503-518BrazilMantle plumes, Flood basalts
DS1997-0004
1997
Abbott, D.H., Drury, R., Mooney, W.D.Continents as lithological icebergs: the importance of bouyant lithosphericroots.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 149, pp. 15-27.Russia, Europe, UralsSubduction, plumes, Oceanic crust
DS1997-0024
1997
Alvarado, G.E., Denyer, P., Sinton, C.W.The 89 Tortugal komatiitic suite, Costa Rica: implications for a common geological origin .... mantleGeology, Vol. 25, No. 5, May pp. 439-442Costa Rica, CaribbeanKomatiites, Mantle plume
DS1997-0042
1997
Arndt, N.T., Kerr, A.C., Tarney, J.Dynamic melting in plume heads; the formation of Gorgona komatiitebasaltsEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 146, No. 1-2, Jan. 1, pp. 289-302GlobalMantle plumes, Komatiites
DS1997-0092
1997
Bercovici, D., Kelly, A.The non-linear initiation of diapirs and plume headsPhysics of the Earth and Plan. Interiors, Vol. 101, pp. 119-130MantlePlumes, diapirs, Tectonics
DS1997-0219
1997
Cordery, M.J., Davies, G.F., Campbell, I.H.Genesis of flood basalts from eclogite bearing mantle plumesJournal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 102, No. 9, Sept. 10, pp. 20, 179-98MantlePlumes, Eclogite, basalts
DS1997-0278
1997
Dobretsov, N.L.Permian Triassic magmatism and sedimentation in Eurasia as a result of asuperplume.Doklady Academy of Sciences, in Eng., Vol. 354, No. 4, pp. 497-500.Europe, AsiaAlkaline magmatism, Superplume, hotspot
DS1997-0279
1997
Dobretsov, N.L.Mantle superplumes as a cause of the main geological periodicity and globalreorganizations.Doklady Academy of Sciences, Vol. 355A, No. 6, July-Aug. pp. 1316-19.MantleDiapirs, Plumes, hot spots
DS1997-0336
1997
Farnetani, C.G.Excess temperature of mantle plumes: the role of chemical stratification across 'D'Geophys. Research Letters, Vol. 24, No. 13, July 1, pp. 1583-86MantlePlumes, Geochemistry
DS1997-0399
1997
Gibson, S.A., Thompson, R.N., Weska, R.K., Dickin, A.P.Late Cretaceous rift related upwelling and melting of the Trindade starting mantle plume head beneath Brasil.Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology, Vol. 126, pp. 303-314.BrazilMantle plume, Tectonics
DS1997-0449
1997
Griselen, M., Arndt, N.A., Baragar, W.R.A.Plume lithosphere interaction and crustal contamination during formation of Coppermine River basalts, northwest Territories.Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, Vol. 34, No. 7, July pp. 958=975Northwest TerritoriesMantle plumes, Mackenzie dyke swarms, geochronology, Coppermine River basalts
DS1997-0485
1997
Hatton, C.J.The superocean cycleSouth African Journal of Geology, Vol. 100, 4, Dec. pp. 301-310MantleChondrites, bulk earth composition, Mantle convection, potassium, plumes
DS1997-0486
1997
Hatton, C.J.The superocean cycleSouth African Journal of Geology, Vol. 100, 4, Dec. pp. 301-310.MantleChondrites, bulk earth composition, Mantle convection, potassium, plumes
DS1997-0580
1997
Kellogg, L.H., King, S.D.The effect of temperature dependent viscosity on the structure of new plumes in the mantle: finite model....Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 148, No. 1-2, Apr. 1, pp. 13-26.MantlePlumes
DS1997-0651
1997
Larsen, T.B., Yuen, D.A.Ultrafast upwelling bursting through the upper mantleEarth and Planetary Letters, Vol. 146, No. 3/4. Feb 1, pp. 393-400.MantlePlumes
DS1997-0670
1997
Leitch, A.M., Cordery, M.J., Davies, G.F., Campbell, I.Flood basalts from eclogite bearing mantle plumesSouth African Journal of Geology, Vol. 100, 4, Dec. pp. 311-318MantleConvection, melt, Plumes
DS1997-0671
1997
Leitch, A.M., Cordery, M.J., Davies, G.F., Campbell, I.Flood basalts from eclogite bearing mantle plumesSouth African Journal of Geology, Vol. 100, 4, Dec. pp. 311-318.MantleConvection, melt, Plumes
DS1997-0703
1997
Lundqvist, J.The tinguait boulder fan in northern Dalarna, Sweden and thePermo Carboniferous rifting of Scandinavia.Gff., Vol. 119, pp. 123-126.SwedenMantle plumes, Geomorphology, glacial
DS1997-0717
1997
Mahoney, J.J., Coffin, M.F.Large igneous provinces - continental, oceanic and planetary floodvolcanism.American Geophysical Union (AGU) Geophys. Mon, No. 100, $ 65.00Idaho, Central African Republic, Colombia, South Africa, Russia, SiberiaBook - table of contents, Flood basalts, Mantle plumes
DS1997-0723
1997
Manga, M.Interactions between mantle diapirsGeophysical Research Letters, Vol. 24, No. 15, Aug. 1, pp. 1871-4.MantleDiapirs, Plumes
DS1997-0834
1997
Nakakuki, T., Yuen, D.A., Honda, S.The interaction of plumes with the transition zone under continents andoceans.Earth and Planetary Letters, Vol. 146, No. 3/4. Feb 1, pp. 379-392.MantlePlumes
DS1997-0859
1997
Nyblade, A.A.Heat flow the East African PlateauGeophy. Res. Letters, Vol. 24, No. 16, Au. 15, pp. 2083-86.East AfricaMantle, Plumes, geothermometry
DS1997-1058
1997
Sleep, N.H.Lateral flow and ponding of starting plume materialJournal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 102, No. 5, May 10, pp. 10, 001-12MantlePlumes
DS1997-1116
1997
Storey, B.C., Kyle, P.R.An active mantle mechanism for Gondwana breakupSouth African Journal of Geology, Vol. 100, 4, Dec. pp. 283-290GlobalPlate tectonics, Mantle plumes, megaplume
DS1997-1117
1997
Storey, B.C., Kyle, P.R.An active mantle mechanism for Gondwana breakupSouth African Journal of Geology, Vol. 100, 4, Dec. pp. 283-290.GlobalPlate tectonics, Mantle plumes, megaplume
DS1997-1142
1997
Taylor, R.N., Thirwall, M.F., Gee, M.A.M.Isotopic constraints on the influence of the Icelandic plumeEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 148, No. 1-2, Apr. 1, pp. E1-GlobalPlumes, hotspots, Geochronology
DS1997-1194
1997
Van Keken, P.Evolution of starting mantle plumes: a comparison between numerical and laboratory models.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 148, No. 1-2, Apr. 1, pp. 1-12.MantlePlumes
DS1997-1223
1997
Walzer, U., Hendel, R.Tectonic episodicity and convective feed back mechanismPhysics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors, Vol. 100, No. 1-3, pp.MantleTectonics, Plumes
DS1997-1233
1997
Weinberg, R.F.Rise of starting plumes through mantle of temperature, pressure, and stress dependent viscosity.Journal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 102, No. 4, April 10, pp. 7613-24.MantlePlumes
DS1997-1248
1997
White, R.S.Mantle plume origin for the Karoo and Ventersdorp flood basalts, SouthAfrica.South African Journal of Geology, Vol. 100, 4, Dec. pp. 271-282.South AfricaGondwana Rifting, lavas, Mantle plumes
DS1997-1266
1997
Wolfe, C.J., Bjarnason et al.Seismic structure of Iceland mantle plumeNature, Vol. 385, Jan. 16, pp. 245-247.GlobalGeophysics - seismics, Plumes, hot spots
DS1998-0079
1998
Barley, M.E., Krapez, B., Kerrich, R.The Late Archean bonanza: metallogenic and environmental consequences Of the interaction... plumesPrecambrian Research, Vol. 91, No. 1-2, Aug. 1, pp. 65-90MantlePlumes, lithospheric tectonics, Mantle plumes, lithosphere tectonics, Global cyclicity - not specific to diamonds
DS1998-0079
1998
Barley, M.E., Krapez, B., Kerrich, R.The Late Archean bonanza: metallogenic and environmental consequences Of the interaction... plumesPrecambrian Research, Vol. 91, No. 1-2, Aug. 1, pp. 65-90MantlePlumes, lithospheric tectonics, Mantle plumes, lithosphere tectonics, Global cyclicity - not specific to diamonds
DS1998-0190
1998
Burke, K.Do three or more rifts that meet indicate the location or the former location of an underlying mantle plume?Geological Society of America (GSA) Annual Meeting, abstract. only, p.A344.Tanzania, East AfricaTectonics, Mantle plumes
DS1998-0202
1998
Campbell, I.H.Identification of old mantle plumes: what to look forGeological Society of America (GSA) Annual Meeting, abstract. only, p.A343.MantlePlumes, Kimberlites
DS1998-0252
1998
Christensen, U.Volcanics: fixed hotspots gone with the windNature, Vol. 391, No. 6669, Feb. 19, pp. 739-740GlobalHotspots, Volcanics, plumes, tectonics
DS1998-0280
1998
Cox, K.G.River flow patterns associated with Mesozoic and Cenozoic plumes, can this be expanded to Paleozoic ProtGeological Society of America (GSA) Annual Meeting, abstract. only, p.A343-4.South AfricaPlumes, Mid-Proterozoic
DS1998-0506
1998
Gibson, S.A., Thompson, R.N., Dickin, A.P.Subcontinental mantle plume impact and kimberlite genesis7th International Kimberlite Conference Abstract, pp. 250-2.Angola, Brazil, Namibia, ParaguayMantle plume, Deposit - Lunda area
DS1998-0593
1998
Hatton, C.J.Did the Tristan plume play a role in the genesis of Gondwana kimberlites?Journal of African Earth Sciences, Vol. 27, 1A, p. 107. AbstractGondwanaPlume
DS1998-0616
1998
Herzberg, C., O'Hara, M.J.Phase equilibrium constraints on the origin of basalts, picrites andkomatiites.Earth Science Reviews, Vol. 44, No. 1-2, July pp. 39-79.South Africa, IcelandPeridotites, Craton, lithosphere, mantle plumes, Petrology, Picrites
DS1998-0800
1998
Krabbendam, M.Sites of rifting of Gondwana and the relative importance of hot spots and pre-existing structures.Journal of African Earth Sciences, Vol. 27, 1A, p. 127. AbstractGondwanaPlumes, Tectonics
DS1998-0878
1998
Litasov, K.D., Litasov, Yu.D.Reactional and differentiated pyroxenite xenoliths from alkaline basalts Of the Vitim volcanic field:7th International Kimberlite Conference Abstract, pp. 505-8.Russia, YakutiaMetasomatism, mantle magmatic system, plume, Deposit - VitiM.
DS1998-0879
1998
Litasov, Yu.D., Niida, K., Litasov, K.D.Reactional modification of the primitive mantle by basaltic melts: evidence from mantle derived xenoliths7th International Kimberlite Conference Abstract, pp. 509-11.Russia, YakutiaMetasomatism, mantle magmatic system, plume, Deposit - VitiM.
DS1998-0910
1998
Maaloe, S.Extraction of primary abyssal tholeiite from a stratified plumeJournal of Geology, Vol. 106, No. 2, March pp. 163-179.MantleHarzburgite, Melt layers, plumes
DS1998-0911
1998
Maaloe, S.Melt dynamics of a layered mantle plume sourceContributions to Mineralogy and Petrology, Vol. 133, No. 1-2, pp. 83-95.MantlePlume, Geodynamics
DS1998-0951
1998
Marty, B., Upton, B.G., Ellam, R.M.Helium isotopes in early Tertiary basalts, northeast Greenland: evidence for 59 Ma plume activity ...Geology, Vol. 26, No. 5, May pp. 407-410.GlobalMagmatism, plumes, Geochronology
DS1998-0986
1998
McNutt, M.K.Superswells... volcanism in the South Pacific - insights into geophysical processes in earth's mantle.Reviews of Geophysics, Vol. 36, No. 2, May pp. 211-244.MantlePlumes, Menard theory
DS1998-1217
1998
Ratcliffe, J.T., Bercovici, D., Schubert, G., KroenkeMantle plume heads and initiation of plate tectonic reorganizationsEarth Plan. Sci. Lett, Vol. 156, No. 3-4, March 30, pp. 195-208MantlePlumes, Tectonics, geodynamics
DS1998-1218
1998
Ratcliffe, J.T., Bercovici, Schubert, KroenkeMantle plume heads and the initiation of plate tectonic reorganizationsEarth Sci. Plan. Lett., Vol. 156, No. 3-4, Mar. 30, pp. 195-208.MantlePlumes, Tectonics
DS1998-1260
1998
Royden, L.H.Geological insights into the deep crust: what can the upper crust tell us about what's underneath?Geological Society of America (GSA) Annual Meeting, abstract. only, p.A243.GlobalTectonics, Plume, rheology
DS1998-1270
1998
Ryabchikov, I., Brooks, C.K., Kogarko, Nielsen, SolovovaTertiary picrites from Greenland: modelling sources and petrogenesis from melt inclusion compositions.Mineralogical Magazine, Goldschmidt abstract, Vol. 62A, p. 1306-7.GreenlandMagnesian melts, Plume
DS1998-1287
1998
Savenko, A.V.The co-precipitation of phosphorous, arsenic and vanadium with iron hydroxide in hydrothermal plumes.Doklady Academy of Sciences, Vol. 361A, No. 6, pp. 866-8.MantlePlumes
DS1998-1462
1998
Thompson, G.A.Deep mantle plumes and geoscience vision.GSA Presidential address 1997. 8pages Colour photographs.Gsa Today, Vol. 8, No. 4, April pp. 17-24.Mantle, Ontario, Nevada, Cape Verde IslandsPlumes, Mackenzie Dyke swarms
DS1998-1463
1998
Thompson, P.F., Tackley, P.J.Generation of megaplumes from the core mantle boundary in a compressible mantle with temperature -dependent...Geophysical Research Letters, Vol. 25, No. 11, June, pp. 1999-2003.MantleBoundary, Plumes
DS1998-1470
1998
Tomlinson, K.Y., Stevenson, R.K., Henry, P.The Red Lake GS: evidence of plume related magmatism at 3 Ga and evidence of an older enriched sourcePrecambrian Research, Vol. 89, No. 1-2, May pp. 59-76Ontario, Superior ProvinceGreenstone Belt, Plumes, magmas
DS1998-1477
1998
Torsvik, T., Tucker, Ashwal, Eide, Rakotosolofo, De WitMadagascar: Cretaceous volcanism and the Marian hot spotJournal of African Earth Sciences, Vol. 27, 1A, p. 197. AbstractMadagascarvolcanism., Plume
DS1998-1589
1998
Wolfe, C.J.Seismic evidence for a lower mantle origin of the Iceland PlumeNature, Vol. 395, No. 6697, Sept. 3, pp. 63-65.GlobalGeophysics - seismics, Plume
DS1998-1614
1998
Yasuda, A., Fujii, T.Ascending subducted oceanic crust entwined with mantle plumesGeophysical Research Letters, Vol. 25, No. 10, May 15, p. 1561-MantlePlumes, Subduction
DS1998-1619
1998
Yuen, D.A.Plumes originating from the transition zone: dynamical consequences on thermal and geochemical evolution.Geological Society of America (GSA) Annual Meeting, abstract. only, p.A208.MantlePlumes
DS1999-0064
1999
Bijwaard, H., Spakman, W.Tomographic evidence for a narrow whole mantle plume below IcelandEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 166, No. 3-4, Mar. 15, pp. 121-6.GlobalMantle plume, Hotspot, seismic
DS1999-0190
1999
Edwards, B.R., Russell, J.K.Northern Cordilleran volcanic province: a northern Basin and Range?Geology, Vol. 27, 3, Mar. pp. 243-6.British ColumbiaVolcanics, magmatism, mantle plume, rifting, Alkaline rocks, East African Rift
DS1999-0196
1999
Eltayeb, I.A.The stability of compositional plumes in a rotating magnetic fluidPhysical Earth and Planetary Interiors, Vol. 110, pp. 1-19.MantlePlumes, thermal convection
DS1999-0224
1999
Franz, G., Steiner, G., Hammerscmidt, K.Plume related alkaline magmatism in central Africa... the Meidob Hills ( Western Sudan).Chemical Geology, Vol. 157, No. 1-2, May 3, pp. 27-48.GlobalAlkaline rocks, Hotspot, plume
DS1999-0291
1999
Harrison, D., Burnard, P., Turner, G.Noble gas behaviour and composition in the mantle: constraints from Icelandplume.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 171, No. 2, Aug. 30, pp. 199-208.GlobalGeochemistry, Plume
DS1999-0292
1999
Harrison, D., Burnard, P., Turner, G.Noble gas behaviour and composition in the mantle: constraints from the Iceland plume.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 171, pp. 199-207.GlobalModels, plumes, mantle
DS1999-0394
1999
Larsen, T.B., Yuen, D.A., Storey, M.Ultrafast mantle plumes and implications for flood basalt volcanism in the northern Atlantic region.Tectonophysics, Vol. 311, No. 1-4, Sept. 30, pp. 31-82.Baltic States, Quebec, Ungava, Finland, Sweden, NorwayMantle plumes, Flood basalts - review
DS1999-0490
1999
Moore, W.B., Schubert, P.J., Tackley, P.J.The role of rheology in lithospheric thinning by mantle plumesGeophysical Research Letters, Vol. 26, No. 8, Apr. 15, pp. 1073-76.MantlePlumes, hotspots, Lithosphere - thinning
DS1999-0525
1999
Olsen, P.E.Giant lava flows, mass extinction and mantle plumesScience, Vol. 284, No. 5414, Apr. 23, pp. 604-6.MantlePlumes
DS1999-0639
1999
ScienceGeophysics : the Great African plume emerges as a tectonic playerScience, Vol. 285, No. 5425, July 9, pp. 187-8.AfricaMantle plumes, Geophysics - seismics
DS1999-0663
1999
Sheth, H.C.Flood basalts and large igneous provinces from deep mantle plumes: fact, fiction and fallacy.Tectonophysics, Vol. 311, No. 1-4, Sept. 30, pp. 1-30.GlobalMantle plumes, Flood basalts - review
DS1999-0680
1999
Smallwood, J.R., Staples, R.K., White, R.Crust generated above the Iceland mantle plume: from continental rift to oceanic spreading center.Journal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 104, No. B10, Oct. 10, pp. 22885-902.GlobalMantle plume, Tectonics
DS1999-0718
1999
Storey, B.C., Leat, P.T., Kelley, S.Mantle plumes and Antartica New Zealand rifting: evidence from Mid Cretaceous mafic dykes.Journal of Geological Society of London, Vol. 156, No. 4, July 1, pp; 659-72.GlobalPlumes, Dikes
DS1999-0750
1999
Tychkov, S.A., Rychkova, E.V., Vasilevskii, A.N.Interaction between a plume and thermal convection in the continental uppermantle.Russian Geology and Geophysics, Vol. 39, No. 4, pp. 423-34.MantlePlume, hotspots, Geothermometry
DS1999-0751
1999
Tychkov, S.A., Vasilevskii, A.N., Rychkova, E.V.Evolution of plume beneath continental lithosphere of variable thicknessRussian Geology and Geophysics, Vol. 40, No. 8, pp. 1163-76.MantlePlumes, Lithosphere
DS1999-0809
1999
Wullner, U., Davies, G.F.Numerical evaluation of mantle plume spacing, size, flow rates andunsteadiness.Journal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 104, No. 4, Apr. 10, pp. 7377-88.MantlePlumes, hotspots
DS2000-0021
2000
Anderson, D.L.The thermal state of the Upper Mantle: no role for mantle plumesGeophysical Research Letters, Vol. 27, No. 22, Nov. 15, pp. 3623-26.MantlePlumes, Geothermometry
DS2000-0032
2000
Arnst, N.Geochemistry: hot heads and cold tailsNature, Vol. 407, No. 6803, Sept. 28, p. 458. 1p.MantlePlumes, hot spots
DS2000-0116
2000
Brunet, D., Yuen, D.A.Mantle plumes pinched in the transition zoneEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 178, No. 1-2, May 15, pp.13-28.MantleMantle plumes, Genesis
DS2000-0194
2000
Cserepes, L., Yuen, D.A.On the possibility of a second kind of mantle plumeEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol.183, No.1-2, Nov.30, pp.61-71.MantlePlumes, Hot spots
DS2000-0200
2000
Dalziel, I.W.D., Lawver, L.A., Murphy, J.B.Plumes, orogenesis, and supercontinental fragmentationEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 178, No. 1-2, May 15, pp. 1-12.MantleMantle plumes, Genesis - Tectonics, plate
DS2000-0472
2000
Karmnacher, N.R., Griffin, W.L., O'Reilly, S.Y.Ultramafic xenoliths from Kutch ( northwest India): plume related mantle samples?International Geology Review, Vol. 42, pp. 416-44.IndiaMantle plumes, Xenoliths
DS2000-0476
2000
Keen, C.E., Boutilier, R.R.Interaction of rifting and hot horizontal plume sheets at volcanic marginsJournal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 105, No. 6, June 10, pp. 13375-MantleTectonics - rifting, Plumes
DS2000-0524
2000
Korenaga, J., Kelemen, P.B.Major element heterogeneity in the mantle source of the North Atlantic igneous province.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 184, No.1, Dec.30, pp. 251-68.GlobalHot spots, plumes, drift, flood basalts, Melt composition
DS2000-0541
2000
Kuamgai, I., Kurita, K.On the fate of mantle plumes at density interfacesEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 179, No. 1, June 15, pp.63-72.MantlePlumes, Zones
DS2000-0609
2000
Malpas, J., Robinson, P.T.No. 4The origin and evolution of oceanic lithosphere: magmatic processes at oceanic spreading centresGeoscience Canada, Vol. 27, No. 3, Sept. pp. 131-46.MantlePlumes, geophysics, magma chambers, ophiolites
DS2000-0634
2000
Matyska, C., Yuen, D.A.Profiles of the Bulletinen parameter from mantle convection modellingEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 178, No. 1-2, May 15, pp.39-46.MantleMantle plumes, Convection
DS2000-0653
2000
Menzies, M.A., Ebinger, C.Volcanic rifted margins. Penrose conference reportGsa Today, Aug, pp. 8-11.MantleMagmatism, plumes, rifting
DS2000-0666
2000
Mironov, Yu.V., Rhyakhovskii, V.M., Pustovoi, A.A.Strontium, neodymium, lead isotopic zoning in the world ocean and mantle plumes.Geochemistry International, Vol. 38, No.S1, pp. S20-7.MantleSuperplumes, Subduction
DS2000-0799
2000
Raval, U., Veeraswamy, K.The radial and linear modes of interaction between mantle plume and continental lithosphere: case study...Journal of Geological Society India, Vol. 56, No. 5, Nov. pp. 525-36.IndiaPlumes, dynamics, structures
DS2000-0953
2000
Thompson, R.N., Gibson, S.A.Transient high temperature in mantle plume heads inferred from magnesian olivines Phanerozoic picritesNature, Vol. 407, No. 6803, Sept. 28, pp. 502-5.MantlePlumes, hot spots, Picrites
DS2000-1015
2000
Williams, G.E., Gostin, V.A.Mantle plume uplifts in the sedimentary record : origin of kilometer deep canyons within late Neoproterozoic...Journal of Geological Society of London, Vol. 157, No. 4, July pp. 759-68.Australia, SouthTectonics, Plumes
DS2001-0048
2001
Arndt, N.Hot heads and cold tails... volumes of lavaNature, Vol. 407, Sept. 28, pp. 458-61.MantlePlumes, hotspots
DS2001-0080
2001
Balyshev, S.O., Ivanov, A.V.Low density anomalies in the mantle: ascending plumes and or heated fossil lithospheric plates?Doklady Academy of Sciences, Vol. 380, No. 7, Sept/Oct. pp. 858-62.MantleHot spots, plumes
DS2001-0099
2001
Bell, K.Carbonatites: relationships to mantle plume activityGeological Society of America Special Paper, Special Paper. 352, pp. 267-90.MantlePlumes, Carbonatite
DS2001-0101
2001
Bell, K., Tilton, G.R.neodymium lead and Strontium isotopic compositions of East African carbonatites: evidence for mantle mixing and plume....Journal of Petrology, Vol. 42, No. 10, Oct. pp. 1927-46.TanzaniaPlumes - inhomogeneity, mantle plumes, Carbonatite
DS2001-0155
2001
Campbell, I.H.Identification of ancient mantle plumesGeological Society of America Special Paper, Special Paper, 352, pp. 5-22.MantlePlumes, Geochronology
DS2001-0186
2001
Choblet, G., Parmentier, E.M.Mantle upwelling and melting beneath slow spreading centers: effects variable rheology melt productivity.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 184, No.3-4, Jan.30, pp.589-04.MantleMelting, Plumes
DS2001-0204
2001
Condie, K.C.Mantle plumes and their record in Earth's historyCambridge University Press, $40.00MantleBook - review in Geoscience Canada 29, 3, p.128., Plumes, summary, superplume
DS2001-0204
2001
Condie, K.C.Mantle plumes and their record in Earth's historyCambridge University Press, $40.00MantleBook - review in Geoscience Canada 29, 3, p.128., Plumes, summary, superplume
DS2001-0262
2001
Dobretsov, N.L., Vernikovsky, V.A.Mantle plumes and their geologic manifestationsInternational Geology Review, Vol. 43, No. 9, Sept. pp. 771-87.MantlePlumes, hot spots, Review
DS2001-0301
2001
Ernst, R.E., Buchan, K.L.Mantle plumes : their identification through timeGeological Society America Special Paper, Special Paper 352, 598p. $ 140.00GlobalBook, Mantle plumes
DS2001-0302
2001
Ernst, R.E., Buchan, K.L.Large mafic magmatic events through time and links to mantle plume headsGeological Society of America, Special Paper, Special Paper. 352, pp. 483-576.MantlePlumes, Magmatism
DS2001-0303
2001
Ernst, R.K., Buchan, K.L.The use of mafic dike swarms in identifying and locating mantle plumesGeological Society of America, Special Paper, Special Paper. 352, pp. 247-66.MantlePlumes, Dike swarms
DS2001-0488
2001
Hopper, W.S., Larsen, Korenaga, DahlJensen, Reid etc.Mantle thermal structure and active upwelling during continental breakup in the North Atlantic.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 190, No. 3-4, pp. 251-66.Baltica, Greenland, NorwayTectonics, Plume
DS2001-0550
2001
Jones, S.M., White, N., Lovell, B.Cenozoic and Cretaceous transient uplift in the Porcupine Basin and its relationship to a mantle plume.Geological Society of London Special Publication, No. 187, pp. 345-60.OntarioTectonics, Plumes
DS2001-0622
2001
Kontak, D.J., Jensen, S.M., Dostal, Archibald, KyserCretaceous mafic dike swarm, Peary Land, northern most Greenland: geochronology and petrology.Canadian Mineralogist, Vol. 39, No. 4, Aug. pp. 997-1020.GreenlandLamprophyres, Mantle plume
DS2001-0672
2001
Leitch, A.M., Davies, G.F.Mantle plumes and flood basalts: enhanced melting from plume ascent and an eclogite component.Journal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 106, No.2, Feb.10, pp. 2047-60.MantlePlumes, Eclogites
DS2001-0792
2001
Montagner, J.P., Ritsema, J.Interaction between ridge and plumesScience, Vol. 5546, Nov. 16, p.1472-3.GlobalHotspots, Plumes
DS2001-0813
2001
Muller, R.D., Gaina, C., Roest, W.R., KLunbek HansenA recipe for microcontinent formationGeology, Vol. 29, No. 3, Mar. pp.203-6.GreenlandPlumes, accretion, terranes, Tectonics
DS2001-0869
2001
O'Reilly, S. Griffin, Djomani, Natapov, Pearson, DaviesThe mantle beneath the Slave Craton: composition and architectureSlave-Kaapvaal Workshop, Sept. Ottawa, 5p. abstractNorthwest TerritoriesPetrology, Tectonics - geochemistry, geophysics, plume
DS2001-0890
2001
Parman, S.W., Grove, Dann, J.C.The production of Barberton komatiites in an Archean subduction zoneGeophysical Research Letters, Vol. 28, No. 13, July 1, pp. 2513-16.South AfricaSubduction, Mantle plumes
DS2001-0954
2001
Puffer, J.H.Contrasting high field strength element contents of continental flood basalts from plume versus arc..Geology, Vol. 29, No. 8, Aug. pp. 675-8.Russia, SiberiaPlumes, arcs, geochemistry
DS2001-0959
2001
Rainbird, R.H., Ernst, R.E.The sedimentary record of mantle plume upliftGeological Society of America, Special Paper, Special Paper. 352, pp. 227-46.MantleRifting, tectonics, Plumes
DS2001-0998
2001
Ryabichikov, I.D., Solovova, I.P., Ntaflos, Th., BuchlSubalkaline picrobasalts: melt inclusion chemistry, composition of primary magmas and P T regime -Geochemistry International, Vol. 39, No. 5, pp. 432-46.Russia, SiberiaSuperplume
DS2001-1026
2001
Schaeffer, N., Manga, M.Interaction of rising and sinking mantle plumesGeophysical Research Letters, Vol. 28, No. 3, Feb. 1, pp.455-8.MantlePlumes, hotspots
DS2001-1029
2001
Schissel, D., Samil, R.Deep mantle plumes and ore depositsGeological Society of America, Special Paper, Special Paper. 352, pp. 291-322.MantlePlumes, Metallogeny
DS2001-1051
2001
Sengor, A.M.C.Elevation as indicator of mantle plume activityGeological Society of America, Special Paper, Special Paper. 352, pp. 183-226.MantleRifting, tectonics, Plumes
DS2001-1086
2001
Skovgaard, A.C., Storey, M., Baker, Blusztajn, HartOsmium oxygen isotopic evidence for a recycled and strongly depleted component in the Iceland mantle plumeEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 194, No. 1-2, pp. 259-75.IcelandPlume, Geochronology
DS2001-1135
2001
Storey, B.C., Leat, P.T., Ferris, J.K.The location of mantle plume centers during the initial stages of Gondwana breakupGeological Society of America, Special Paper, Special Paper. 352, pp. 71-80.MantleRifting, tectonics, Gondwana, Plumes
DS2001-1162
2001
Tomlinson, K.Y., Condie, K.C.Archean mantle plumes: evidence from greenstone belt geochemistryGeological Society of America, Special Paper, Special Paper. 352, pp. 341-58.MantlePlumes, Geochemistry
DS2001-1306
2001
Zhao, D.Seismic structure and origin of hotspots and mantle plumesEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 192, No. 3, pp. 251-65.MantleMantle plume, Hotspots
DS2002-0003
2002
Abbott, D.H., Isley, A.E.Extraterrestrial influence on mantle plume activityEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 205, 1-2, pp. 53-62.MantleHot spots, plumes
DS2002-0135
2002
Bell, K.Carbonatites and related alkaline rocks, lamprophyres, and kimberlites - indicators mantle plume activity.Role of Superplumes in the Earth System Interiors: Workshop on Earth Systems, 3p. abst.GlobalPlumes, hotspots
DS2002-0201
2002
Breddam, K.Kistufell: primitive melt from the Iceland mantle plumeJournal of Petrology, Vol. 43, No. 2, pp. 345-74.IcelandPlume, hot spot
DS2002-0290
2002
Christiansen, R.L., Foulger, G.R., Evans, J.R.Upper mantle origin of the Yellowstone hotspotGeological Society of America Bulletin, Vol. 114,10,Oct. pp. 1245-56.IdahoPlumes
DS2002-0334
2002
Cox, R.T., Van Arsdale, R.B.The Mississippi embayment, North America: a first order continental structure generated by the Cretaceous superplume mantle event.Journal of Geodynamics, Vol.34,pp. 163-76.Kansas, Appalachia, MidcontinentTectonics, superplume, hotspot
DS2002-0435
2002
Ernst, R.E., Buchan, K.L.Erratum to Maximum size and distribution in time and space of mantle plumesJournal of Geodynamics, Vol. 34, No. 5. pp.MantlePlumes
DS2002-0437
2002
Ernst, R.E.,Buchan, K.L.Maximum size and distribution in time and space for mantle plumes; evidence from large igneous provinces.Journal of Geodynamics, Vol.34,2, Sept. pp. 309-42.MantleHot spots, plumes, Magmatism - review
DS2002-0469
2002
Fohlmeister, J.F., Renka, R.J.Distribution of mantle up welling determined from plate motions: a case for large scale Benard Convection.Geophysical Research Letters, Vol. 29, 10, DOI 10.1029/2001GL014625MantleHot spots, plumes
DS2002-0474
2002
Fowler, C.M.R., Ebinger, C., Hawkesworth, C.J.The Early Earth: physical, chemical and biological developmentGeological Society of London (U.K.), 352p.$ 142.00 http://bookshop.geolsoc.org.ukMantleBook - tectonics, deformation, lithosphere, Geophysics, models, plumes
DS2002-0759
2002
Jahren, A.H.The biogeochemical consequences of the mid-Cretaceous superplumeJournal of Geodynamics, Vol.34,2, Sept. pp. 163-76.GlobalBiogeochemistry, Mantle plumes, hot spots
DS2002-0774
2002
Jellinek, A.M., Lenardic, A., Manga, M.The influence of interior mantle temperature on the structure of plumes: heads for Venus, tails for Earth.Geophysical Research Letters, Vol. 29, 10, DOI 10.1029/2001GL014624MantleHot spots, plumes
DS2002-0909
2002
Labrosse, S.Hotspots, mantle plumes and core heat lossEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol.199,1-2,pp.147-56., Vol.199,1-2,pp.147-56.MantlePlumes
DS2002-0910
2002
Labrosse, S.Hotspots, mantle plumes and core heat lossEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol.199,1-2,pp.147-56., Vol.199,1-2,pp.147-56.MantlePlumes
DS2002-1393
2002
Sandiford, M., McLaren, S.Tectonic feedback and the ordering of heat producing elements within the continental lithosphere.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 204, No. 1-2, pp. 133-150.MantleTectonics, plumes
DS2002-1542
2002
Starchenko, S.V., Stepanov, A.A.Heat sources and fluxes in the Earth's mantleDoklady Earth Sciences, Vol. 384, 4, May-June pp. 438-41.MantleHot spots, plumes
DS2002-1661
2002
Vermote, E.F., Roy, D.P.Land surface hot spot observed by MODIS over central AfricaInternational Journal of Remote Sensing, Vol.23,1,pp.2141-44., Vol.23,1,pp.2141-44.Africa, Central African RepublicRemote sensing, Plume
DS2002-1662
2002
Vermote, E.F., Roy, D.P.Land surface hot spot observed by MODIS over central AfricaInternational Journal of Remote Sensing, Vol.23,1,pp.2141-44., Vol.23,1,pp.2141-44.Africa, Central African RepublicRemote sensing, Plume
DS2003-0009
2003
Al-Kindi, S., White, N., Sinha, M., England, R., Tiley, R.Crustal trace of a hot convective sheetGeology, Vol. 31, 3, pp. 207-10.IcelandGeophysics - seismics, Plumes, underplating, convection
DS2003-0291
2003
Courtillot, V., Davaille, A., Besse, J., Stock, J.Three distinct types of hotspots in the Earth's mantleEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 205, 3-4, pp. 295-308.MantlePlumes, Geothermometry
DS2003-0385
2003
Ernst, R.E., Buchan, R.L.Recognizing mantle plumes in the geological recordAnnual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Vol. 31, pp.MantleReview - plumes
DS2003-0709
2003
Kerr, R.A.Mantle plumes both tall and short?Science, Vol. 302, 5651, p. 1643.MantlePlumes
DS2003-0808
2003
Li, K., Wang, Y., Zhao, J., Zhao, H., Di, Y.Mantle plume, large province and continental breakup - additionaly discussion theActa Seismologica Sinica, Vol. 16, 3, pp. 330-9.ChinaTectonics, melting, plumes
DS2003-0812
2003
Li, X., Kind, R., Yuan, X., Sobolev, S.V., Hanka, W., Ramesh, D.S., Gu, Y.Seismic observation of narrow plumes in the oceanic upper mantleGeophysical Research Letters, Vol. 30, 6, p. 67. DOI10.1029/2002GLO15411MantlePlumes
DS2003-1010
2003
Ni, S., Helmberger, D.V.Seismological constraints on the South African superplume; could be the oldest distinctEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 206, 1-2, pp. 119-131.South AfricaGeophysics - seismics, Hot spots, plumes
DS2003-1031
2003
O'Neill, C., Muller, D., Steinberger, B.Geodynamic implications of moving Indian Ocean hotspotsEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 215, 1-2, pp. 151-168.Indian OceanMantle plumes
DS2003-1171
2003
Ritsema, J., Allen, R.M.The elusive mantle plumeEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 207, 1-4, pp. 1-12.MantleHot spots, plumes
DS2003-1176
2003
Rohrman, M., Van der Beek, P.A., Van der Hilst, R.D., Reemst, P.Timing and mechanisms of North Atlantic Cenozoic uplift: evidence for mantleGeological Society of London, Special Publication, No. 196, pp. 27-44.MantlePlumes
DS2003-1336
2003
Stock, J.Hotspots come unstuckScience, No. 5636, August 22, p. 1059.MantlePlumes
DS200412-0035
2004
Anderson, D.L.A short history of the plume hypothesis: the inside story.Anderson, D.L., 22p.MantlePlume history - discussion
DS200412-0345
2003
Collins, A.S., Johnson, S., Fitzimmona, I.C.W., Powell, C.McA., Hulscher, B., Abello, J., Razakamana, T.Neoproterozoic deformation in central Madagascar: a structural section through part of the East African orogen.Proterozoic East Gondwana: Supercontinent assembly and Breakup. Ed. Yoshida , Geological Society of London Spe, No. 206, pp. 363-380.Africa, MadagascarPlume, tectonics
DS200412-0351
2003
Condie, K.C.Supercontinents, superplumes and continental growth: the Neoproterozoic record.Proterozoic East Gondwana: Supercontinent assembly and Breakup. Ed. Yoshida , Geological Society of London Spe, No. 206, pp. 1-22.GlobalPlume, tectonics
DS200412-0522
2004
Eriksson, P.G., Catuneanu, O.Tectonism and mantle plumes through time.The Precambrian Earth, tempos and events, editors Eriksson, P.G., Altermann, W., Nelson, D.R., Mueller, W.U., Elsevier, Developments in Precambrian Geology No. 12, CCanada, Nunavut, Africa, South AfricaSuperplumes, igneous provinces, Baker Lake, Limpopo Bel
DS200412-0523
2003
Ernst, R.E., Buchan, R.L.Recognizing mantle plumes in the geological record.Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Vol. 31, pp.469-523.MantleReview - plumes
DS200412-0559
2003
Fitzsimons, I.C.W.Proterozoic basement provinces of southern and southwestern Australia, and their correlation with Antarctica.Proterozoic East Gondwana: Supercontinent assembly and Breakup. Ed. Yoshida , Geological Society of London Spe, No. 206, pp. 93-130.Australia, AntarcticaPlume, tectonics
DS200412-0569
2003
Foulger, G.R., Anderson, D.L.Iceland is cool: an origin for the Iceland volcanic province in the remelting of subducted Iapetus slabs at normal mantle temperJournal of Geothermal Research, Vol. June 30p.Europe, IcelandGeophysics - seismics, mantle, plume
DS200412-0570
2003
Foulger, G.R., Du, Z., Julian, B.R.Iclandic type crust.Geophysical Journal International, Vol. 155, pp. 567-590.Europe, IcelandGeophysics - seismics, mantle, plume
DS200412-0653
2003
Gerya, T.V., Uken, R., Reinhardt, J., Watkeys, M.K., Maresch, W.V., Clarke, B.M.Cold fingers in a hot magma: numerical modeling of country rock diapirs in the Bushveld Complex, South Africa.Geology, Vol. 31, 9, pp. 753-6.Africa, South AfricaDiapirism, magmatism, plumes, subduction zones
DS200412-0654
2003
Gerya, T.V., Yuen, D.A.Rayleigh Taylor instabilities from hydration and melting propel 'cold plumes' at subduction zones.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 212, 1-2, pp. 47-62.MantleMelting, plumes
DS200412-0711
2003
Grantham, G.H., Maboko, M., Eglington, B.M.A review of the evolution of the Mozambique belt and implications for the amalgamation and dispersal of Rodinia and Gondwana.Proterozoic East Gondwana: Supercontinent assembly and Breakup. Ed. Yoshida , Geological Society of London Spe, No. 206, pp. 401-426.Gondwana, RodiniaPlume, tectonics
DS200412-0732
2004
Grove, T.L., Parman, S.W.Thermal evolution of the Earth as recorded by komatiites.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 219, 3-4, March 15, pp. 173-187.MantlePlume, boninites, subduction zones, melting
DS200412-0747
2004
Guo, F., Fan, W., Wang, Y., Li, C.When did the Emeishan mantle plume activity start? Geochronological and geochemical evidence from ultramafic mafic dykes in soutInternational Geology Review, Vol. 46, 3, pp. 226-234.ChinaPlume, geochronology
DS200412-0786
2003
Hanson, R.E.Proterozoic geochronology and tectonic evolution of southern Africa.Proterozoic East Gondwana: Supercontinent assembly and Breakup. Ed. Yoshida , Geological Society of London Spe, No. 206, pp. 427-56.Africa, South Africa, BotswanaPlume, tectonics
DS200412-0921
2003
Johnson, P.R., Woldehaimanot, B.Development of the Arabian Nubian shield: perspectives on accretion and deformation in the northern East African Orogen and theProterozoic East Gondwana: Supercontinent assembly and Breakup. Ed. Yoshida , Geological Society of London Spe, No. 206, pp. 289-326.AfricaPlume, tectonics
DS200412-0935
2004
Jourdan, F., Feraud, G., Betrand, H., Kampunzu, A.B., Tshoso, G., Le Gall, B., Tiercelin, J.J., Capiz, P.The Karoo triple junction questioned: evidence from Jurassic and Proterzoic 40 Ar 39 Ar ages and geochemistry of the giant OkavaEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 222, 3-4, June 15, pp. 989-1006.Africa, BotswanaGeochronology, mantle plume
DS200412-0989
2003
Kerr, R.A.Mantle plumes both tall and short?Science, Vol. 302, 5651, p. 1643.MantlePlume
DS200412-1126
2003
Li, K., Wang, Y., Zhao, J., Zhao, H., Di, Y.Mantle plume, large province and continental breakup - additionaly discussion the Cenozoic and Mesozoic mantle plume problems inActa Seismologica Sinica, Vol. 16, 3, pp. 330-9.ChinaTectonics, melting, plumes
DS200412-1255
2004
McBride, J.H., White, R.S., Smallwood, J.R., England, R.W.Must magmatic intrusion in the lower crust produce reflectivity.Tectonophysics, Vol. 388, 1-4, Sept. 13, pp. 271-297.Europe, IcelandMantle plume, volcanism, geophysics - seismics
DS200412-1272
2004
McHattie, T.G., Heaman, L.M., Creaser, R.A., Skulski, T., Sandeman, H.Dynamic melting in an Archean mantle plume: chemical signature of Prince Albert Group komatiite and basalt, Nunavut Canada.Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 13th Goldschmidt Conference held Copenhagen Denmark, Vol. 68, 11 Supp. July, ABSTRACT p.A595.Canada, NunavutMantle plume
DS200412-1469
2003
O'Neill, C., Muller, D., Steinberger, B.Geodynamic implications of moving Indian Ocean hotspots.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 215, 1-2, pp. 151-168.Indian OceanMantle plume
DS200412-1543
2004
Phipps Morgan, J., Reston, T.J., Ranero, C.R.Contemporaneous mass extinctions, continental flood basalts, and impact signals are mantle plume induced lithospheric gas explosEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 217, 3, Jan. 15, pp. 263-284.MantlePlume
DS200412-1553
2003
Pisarevsky, S.A., Wingate, M.T.D., Powell, C.McA., Johnson, S., Evans, D.A.D.Models of Rodinia assembly and fragmentation.Proterozoic East Gondwana: Supercontinent assembly and Breakup. Ed. Yoshida , Geological Society of London Spe, No. 206, pp. 35-56.GondwanaPlume, tectonics
DS200412-1632
2003
Raval, U.Interaction of mantle plume with Indian continental lithosphere since the Cretaceous.Memoirs Geological Society of India, Vol. 53, pp. 449-479. Ingenta 1035483313IndiaPlume, subduction
DS200412-1681
2003
Rohrman, M., Van der Beek, P.A., Van der Hilst, R.D., Reemst, P.Timing and mechanisms of North Atlantic Cenozoic uplift: evidence for mantle upwelling.Geological Society of London, Special Publication, No. 196, pp. 27-44.MantlePlume
DS200412-1747
2004
Schersten, A., Elliott, T., Hawkesworth, C., Norman, M.Tungsten isotope evidence that mantle plumes contain no contribution from the Earth's core.Nature, No. 6971, pp. 234-6.MantleGeochronology, plumes
DS200412-1922
2003
Stein, M.Tracing the plume material in the Arabian Nubian Shield.Precambrian Research, Vol. 123, 2-4, pp. 223-34.AfricaMantle plume
DS200412-1930
2003
Stock, J.Hotspots come unstuck.Science, No. 5636, August 22, p. 1059.MantlePlume
DS200412-1988
2004
Thorne, M.S., Garnero, E.J., Grand, S.P.Geographic correlation between hot spots and deep mantle lateral shear wave velocity gradients.Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors, Vol. 146, 1-2, pp. 47-63.MantleGeophysics - seismics, plumes
DS200412-2050
2004
Veerswamy, K., Raval, U.Chipping of cratons and breakup along mobile belts of a supercontinent.Earth Planets and Space, Vol. 56, 5, pp.491-500. IngentaIndiaMantle plume, lithosphere, tectonomagmatism
DS200412-2134
2003
Windley, B.F.Continental growth in the Proterozoic: a global perspective.Proterozoic East Gondwana: Supercontinent assembly and Breakup. Ed. Yoshida , Geological Society of London Spe, No. 206, pp. 23-34.GlobalPlume, tectonics
DS200412-2135
2003
Wingate, M.T.D., Evans, D.A.Paleomagnetic constraints on the Proterozoic tectonic evolution of Australia.Proterozoic East Gondwana: Supercontinent assembly and Breakup. Ed. Yoshida , Geological Society of London Spe, No. 206, pp.77-92.AustraliaPlume, tectonics
DS200412-2185
2003
Yoshida, M., Jacobs, J., Santosh, M., Rajesh, H.M.Role of Pan African events in the Circum East Antarctic Orogen of East Gondwana: a critical overview.Proterozoic East Gondwana: Supercontinent assembly and Breakup. Ed. Yoshida , Geological Society of London Spe, No. 206, pp. 57-76.AntarcticaPlume, tectonics
DS200512-0012
2005
Allen, R.M., Xue, M.Constraining the geometry and flow of the Iceland mantle upwelling.www Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractEurope, IcelandMantle plume
DS200512-0018
2005
Anderson, D.L.Scoring hotspots: the plume and plate paradigms.Plates, Plumes, and Paradigms, pp. 31-54. ( total book 861p. $ 144.00)GlobalPlume, hotspots - overview
DS200512-0020
2005
Anderson, D.L., Schramm, K.A.Global hotspot maps.Plates, Plumes, and Paradigms, pp. 19-30. ( total book 861p. $ 144.00)GlobalPlume, hotspots - overview
DS200512-0028
2005
Arndt, N.T., Herzberg, C.The temperature of mantle plumes.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractUnited States, HawaiiMantle plume, geothermometry
DS200512-0056
2005
Baksi, A.K.Critical assessment of radiometric ages for oceanic hotspot tracks, based on statistical analysis of individual ages and evaluation of alteration state.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractIndian OceanMantle plume
DS200512-0082
2005
Beutel, E.K.Large LIP's and the mantle squeeze: a mass balance approach to hotspots.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantleMantle plume
DS200512-0083
2005
Beutel, E.K., Nomade, S., Fronabarger, A.K., Renne, P.R.Pangea's complex breakup: a new rapidly changing stress field model.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 236, pp. 471-485.Pangea, United States, CarolinasDike, geochronology, plume, geochemistry
DS200512-0122
2004
Burke, K., Torsvik, T.H.Derivation of large igneous provinces of the past 200 million years from long term heterogeneities in the deep mantle.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 227, 3-4, Nov. 15, pp. 531-538.MantlePlume, paleomagnetics, seismic tomography, core-mantle
DS200512-0123
2005
Burov, E.Modeling plume head - continental lithosphere interaction using a tectonically realistic lithosphere.mantleplumes.org, 6p.MantleMantle plume
DS200512-0124
2005
Burov, E., Guillou-Frottier, L.The plume head continental lithosphere interaction using a technically realistic formulation for the lithosphere.Geophysical Journal International, Vol. 161, 2, pp. 469-490.MantleHotspots, plumes
DS200512-0125
2005
Burov, E., Guillou-Frottier, L.The plume head - continental lithosphere interaction using a tectonically realistic formulation for the lithosphere.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantleMantle plume
DS200512-0133
2005
Campbell, L.H.Testing the plume hypothesis.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantleMantle plume
DS200512-0147
2005
Cawthorn, R.G.Kaapvaal Craton, South Africa: repeated basic magmatism, diamonds and plumes.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractAfrica, South AfricaMantle plume
DS200512-0163
2005
Chaves, A.De O., Correia Neves, J.M.Magmatism, rifting and sedimentation related to Late Paleoproterozoic mantle plume events of central and southeastern Brazil.Journal of Geodynamics, Vol. 39,3, April pp. 197-208.South America, BrazilMantle plume
DS200512-0164
2005
Cheadle, M.J., Sparks, D.Komatiites and the temperature of the mantle ' some like it hot'.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantleMantle plume, geothermometry
DS200512-0170
2005
Class, C., Goldstein, S.L.Evolution of helium isotopes in the Earth's mantle.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantleMantle plume, geochronology
DS200512-0181
2004
Condie, K.C.Supercontinents and superplume events: distinguishing signals in the geologic record.Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors, Vol. 146, 1-2, pp. 319-332.MantlePlume
DS200512-0182
2005
Condie, K.C.TTGs and adakites: are they both slab melts?Lithos, Vol. 80, 1-4, March pp. 33-44.MantleArchean tectonics, arc systems, mantle plume events
DS200512-0203
2005
Dalziel, I.W.D.The setting of LIPS in the lithosphere through time: one test of the plume hypothesis.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantleMantle plume, geothermometry
DS200512-0214
2005
Davies, J.H.Mantle convection - an overview.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantleMantle plume, geothermometry
DS200512-0215
2005
Davies, J.H.Mantle convection - plumes rooted in mid-mantle.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantleMantle plume, geothermometry, splash
DS200512-0231
2005
Demonterova, E.I., Ivanov, A.V., Raskazov, S.V.Inverse trace element modeling of mantle components from Late Cenozoic basalts in Central Asia.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantle, AsiaMantle plume, geochronology
DS200512-0255
2005
Duncan, R.A.Timing and duration of volcanism at large igneous provinces: implications for geodynamics and links to hotspots.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantleMantle plume
DS200512-0260
2005
Elkins-Tanton, L.T.Continental magmatism caused by lithospheric Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantleMantle plume
DS200512-0283
2004
Fee, D., Duecker, K.Mantle transition zone topography and structure beneath the Yellowstone hotspot.Geophysical Research Letters, Vol. 31, 18, Sept. 28, 10.1029/2004 GLO20636.MantlePlume
DS200512-0292
2005
Fitton, G.Do hotspot basalts share a common mantle source?Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantle, IcelandMantle plume
DS200512-0295
2005
Foulger, G.R.The generation of melting anomalies by plate tectonic processes.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantleMantle plume, geodynamics
DS200512-0296
2005
Foulger, G.R.Plume skepticism: motivation and approaches.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantleMantle plume, geothermometry
DS200512-0297
2005
Foulger, G.R.How hot is Iceland?Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantle, IcelandMantle plume, geothermometry
DS200512-0347
2005
Goes, S.Testing thermal whole mantle plumes seismically.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantleMantle plume, geophysics - seismics, convection
DS200512-0366
2004
Greff-Lefftz, M.Upwelling plumes, superswells and true polar wander.Geophysical Journal International, Vol. 159, 3, pp. 1125-1137.MantlePlume
DS200512-0386
2005
Hagstrum, J.T.Antipodal hotspots and bipolar catastrophes: were oceanic large body impacts the cause?Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 236, pp. 13-27.MantleHotspots, plumes
DS200512-0399
2005
Hansen, U.Generation and evolution of plumes in mantle-relevant scenarios.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantleMantle plume, core-mantle boundary
DS200512-0400
2005
Harada, Y., Wessel, P.How geometry and ages of global hotspots are explained by classical hypotheses of rigid plate and fixed hotspot.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantleMantle plume, tectonics
DS200512-0403
2005
Harris, A., Kincaid, C.The many potential faces of bouyant mantle upwellings: diversity within the plume family.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantleMantle plume, geothermometry
DS200512-0409
2005
Hawkesworth, C.Geochemistry and mantle plumes.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantleMantle plume, geochemistry
DS200512-0419
2005
Heister, L.E., Lesher, C.E.Mantle redox conditions in LIPs: constraints from the North Atlantic igneous province.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantleMantle plume, tectonics, rifting
DS200512-0481
2005
Johnson, J.S., Gibson, S.A., Thompson, R.N., NOwell, G.M.Volcanism in the Vitim volcanic field, Siberia: geochemical evidence for a mantle plume beneath the Baikal Rift Zone.Journal of Petrology, Vol. 46, pp. 1309-1344.Russia, SiberiaPlume
DS200512-0491
2005
Julian, B.R., Evans, J.R.Guided seismic waves: possible mantle plume diagnostics.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantleMantle plume, geophysics - seismics
DS200512-0496
2005
Karmalkar, N.R., Rege, S., Griffin, W.L., O'Reilly, S.Y.Alkaline magmatism from Kutch, NW India: implications for plume lithosphere interaction.Lithos, Vol. 81, 1-4, April pp. 101-119.IndiaDeccan Volcanic Province, Reunion plume, metasomatism
DS200512-0501
2005
Keays, R.Why the high PGE contents of komatiites, picrites and allied rocks require mantle plumes.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantleMantle plume
DS200512-0518
2005
Keshav, S., Van Orman, J.A.Re Os Pt partitioning in sulfur bearing solid/molten iron metals at 3-22 GPa and 1300-1775 C: is the Earth's outer core so giving?Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantleMantle plume, core-mantle boundary
DS200512-0536
2005
King, S.D.How many hotspots can be explained by edge driven convection?Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantleMantle plume, core-mantle boundary
DS200512-0604
2005
Lay, T.Is the D' region the source of mantle plumes?Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantleMantle plume, core-mantle boundary
DS200512-0620
2005
Lesher, C.E., Brown, E.L., Heister, L.E.Paleogene North Atlantic Igneous Province and the Iapetus connection.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantle, Europe, Iceland, GreenlandMantle plume
DS200512-0621
2005
Lesher, C.M.High Mg magmatism through time: implications for mantle plumes.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantle, Canada, Nunavut, Baffin IslandMantle plume
DS200512-0639
2005
Lin, S.C., Van Keken, P.E.Multiple volcanic episodes of flood basalts caused by thermochemical mantle plumes.Nature, No. 7048, July 14, pp. 250-252.MantlePlume, geothermometry
DS200512-0662
2005
Lustrino, M.How the delamination and detachment of lower crust can influence basaltic magmatism.Earth Science Reviews, Vol. 72, 1-2, Sept. pp. 21-38.MantleMagmatism, plume, core-boundary, eclogite, pyroxenite
DS200512-0663
2005
Lustrino, M.How the delamination and detachment of lower crust can influence basaltic magmatism.Earth Science Reviews, Vol. 72, 1-2, Sept. pp. 21-38..MantleMagmatism, plumes, eclogite, pyroxenite
DS200512-0745
2005
Morgan, W.J.The deep mantle plume hypothesis.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantleMantle plume
DS200512-0771
2005
Natland, J.H.Layered mantle alternatives to mantle plumes: evidence from the Pacific Plate.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantleMantle plume
DS200512-0772
2005
Natland, J.H.Influence of eclogite in mantle sources on hot spot temperatures.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantle, Europe, Iceland, GreenlandMantle plume, geothermometry
DS200512-0791
2005
Nolet, G.,Montelli, R.The role of mantle plumes in the Earth's heat budget.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantleMantle plume, geothermometry
DS200512-0792
2005
Norton, I.Passive margin evolution: are plumes an integral part of continental breakup?Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantleMantle plume, tectonics
DS200512-0807
2004
Oldham, D., Davies, J.H.Numerical investigation of layered convection in a three dimensional shell with application to planetary mantles.Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems: G3, Vol. 5, pp. Q12C04 10.1029/2004 GC000603MantleConvection, plumes
DS200512-0808
2005
O'Neil, C., Muller, D., Steinberger, B.On the uncertainties in hot spot reconstructions and the significance of moving hot spot reference frames.Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems: G3, Vol. 6, 4, pp.MantleHotspots, plumes, tectonics, geodynamics
DS200512-0874
2005
Presnall, D.C., Gudfinnsson, G.H.MORB major element systematics: implications for melting models and mantle temperatures.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantle, IcelandMantle plume, geothermometry
DS200512-0906
2005
Ritter, J.R.R.Small scale mantle plumes: imaging and geodynamic aspects.Lecture Notes in Earth Sciences, March p. 69-MantlePlume, geodynamics, geothermometry
DS200512-0947
2004
Schubert, G., Masters, G., Olson, P., Tackley, P.Superplumes or plume clusters?Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors, Vol. 146, 1-2, pp. 147-178.MantlePlume
DS200512-0957
2005
Sears, J.W., St.George, G.M., Winne, J.C.Continental rift systems and anorogenic magmatism.Lithos, Vol. 80, 1-4, March pp. 147-154.Rift, Gondwana, Laurentia, plume
DS200512-0964
2005
Sharma, K.K., Foulger, G.R.Neoproterozoic anorogenic magmatism associated with Rodinia breakup: not a result of mantle superplume.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantle, GondwanaMantle plume, rifting
DS200512-0973
2005
Shen, Y., Hung, S-H.Seismic evidence for a lower mantle origin of the Tanzania hotspot.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractAfrica, TanzaniaMantle plume, geophysics - seismic
DS200512-0976
2005
Sheth, H.C.The Deccan beyond the plume hypothesis.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractIndiaMantle plume, core-mantle boundary
DS200512-0977
2005
Sheth, H.C.Were the Deccan flood basalts derived in part from ancient ocanic crust within the Indian continental lithosphere?Gondwana Research, Vol. 8, 2, pp. 109-127.IndiaSubduction, eclogite, mantle plumes
DS200512-1036
2005
Srivastava, R.K., Heaman, L.M., Sinha, A.K., Shihua, S.Emplacement age and isotope geochemistry of Sung Valley alkaline carbonatite complex, Shillong Plateau, northeastern India: implications for primary carbonateLithos, Vol. 81, 1-4, April pp. 33-54.IndiaMelt, silicate rocks, geochronology, Kerguelen plume
DS200512-1052
2003
Stoppa, F.Consensus and open questions about Italian CO2 driven magma from the mantle.Periodico di Mineralogia, (in english), Vol. LXX11, 1. April, pp. 1-8.MantleKamafugite, plume, subduction
DS200512-1077
2005
Teixell, A., Ayarza, F., Zeyen, H., Fernandez, M., Arboleya, M-L.Effects of mantle upwelling in a compressional setting: the Atlas Mountains of Morocco.Terra Nova, Vol. 17, 5. pp. 456-461.Africa, MoroccoPlume
DS200512-1104
2005
Tuff, J., Takahashi, E., Gibson, S.Experimental constraints on the role of garnet pyroxenite in the genesis of high Fe mantle plume derived melts.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantleMantle plume, ferro-picrites
DS200512-1125
2005
Van Wilk, J.Formation of volcanic rifted margins: influence of the pre-Rift lithosphere architecture.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantle, AfricaMantle plume, rifting
DS200512-1213
2005
Yang, T., Shen, Y.P wave velocity structure of the crust and uppermost mantle beneath Iceland from local earthquake tomography.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Advanced in press,Europe, IcelandMantle tomography, hot spot, plume
DS200512-1228
2004
Zaccarini, F., Stumpfl, E.F., Garuti, G.Zirconolite and Zr Th U minerals in chromities of the Finero complex, western Alps, Italy: evidence for carbonatite type metasomatism in a subcontinental ... mantle plume.Canadian Mineralogist, Vol. 42, 6, pp. 1825-1858.Europe, ItalyMantle plume, carbonatite
DS200512-1252
2005
Zhao, D.Multiscale seismic tomography of mantle plumes and subducting slabs.Chapman Conference held in Scotland August 28-Sept. 1 2005, 1p. abstractMantle, AfricaMantle plume, geophysics - seismics
DS200612-0021
2006
Anderson, D.L.The plate paradigm.mantleplumes.org, 4p.MantlePlume
DS200612-0027
2006
Anfilogov, V.N., Khachai, Y.V.Hydroextrusion as a possible mechanism for the ascent of diapirs, domes and mantle plumes.Geochemistry International, Vol. 44, 8, pp. 808-813.MantlePlume, water
DS200612-0124
2006
Benoit, M.H., Nyblade, A.A., Van Decar, J.C.Upper mantle P wave speed variations beneath Ethiopia and the origin of the Afar hotspot.Geology, Vol. 34, 5, pp. 329-332.Africa, EthiopiaGeophysics - seismic, plume
DS200612-0212
2006
Campbell, I.Testing the mantle plume theory.Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, Vol. 70, 18, p. 3, abstract only.MantlePlume, hot spots
DS200612-0356
2005
Du, Z., Vinnik, L.P., Foulger, G.R.Evidence from P to S mantle converted waves for a flat '660 km' discontinuity beneath Iceland.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 241, 1-2, pp. 271-280.Europe, IcelandPlume, boundary, hot spot
DS200612-0647
2005
Jourdan, F., Feraud, G., Bertrand, H., Watkeys, M.K., Kampunzu, A.B., Le Gall, B.Basement control on dyke distribution in Large Igneous Provinces: case study of the Karoo triple junction.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, mantleplumes.orgAfrica, South AfricaGeochronology, mantle plume, structure, tectonics
DS200612-0690
2006
Kerrich, R., Polat, A.Archean greenstone tonalite duality: thermochemical mantle convection models or plate tectonics in the early Earth global dynamics?Tectonophysics, Vol. 415, 1-4, pp. 141-165.MantleGeothermometry, convection, plumes, arc volcanism
DS200612-0786
2006
Lee, M.J., Lee, J.I., Hur, S.D., Kim, Y., Moutte, J., Balaganskaya, E.Sr Nd Pb isotopic compositions of the Kovdor phoscorite carbonatite complex, Kola Peninsula, NW Russia.Lithos, in press availableRussia, Kola PeninsulaCarbonatite, geochronology, FOZO, plume lithosphere
DS200612-1012
2006
O'Neill, C.Intraplate volcanism, mantle dynamics and diamond exploration.GEMOC Annual Report, 2005, p. 28-29.MantlePlume
DS200612-1062
2006
Peate, D., Kerr, A.Plumes and large igneous provinces.Goldschmidt Conference 16th. Annual, S4-08 theme abstract 1/8p. goldschmidt2006.orgMantleHotspots, plumes
DS200612-1069
2006
Peltonen, P., Manttari, I., Huhma, H., Whitehouse, M.J.Multi stage origin of the lower crust of the Karelian craton from 3.5 to 1.7 Ga based on isotopic ages of kimberlite derived mafic granulite xenoliths.Precambrian Research, Vol. 147, 1-2, June 10, pp. 107-123.Europe, FinlandGeochronology, kimberlite, mantle plume, craton
DS200612-1265
2005
Sharapov, V.N., Kudryavtseva, O.P.Possible variations of rock density in the Oceanic lithosphere above hot spots at the distillation of volatiles from mantle magma sources.Doklady Earth Sciences, Vol. 403A, 6, pp. 880-885.MantleMantle plume
DS200612-1322
2006
Sleep, N.H.Mantle plumes from top to bottom.Earth Science Reviews, Vol. 77, 4, pp. 231-271.MantleReview - plumes
DS200612-1407
2005
Tan, E., Gurnis, M.Metastable superplumes and mantle compressibility.Geophysical Research Letters, Vol. 32, 20, Oct. 28, L20307MantlePlume, hotspots
DS200612-1571
2006
Yirgu, G., Ebinger, C.J., Maguire, P.K.H.The Afar volcanic province within the East African Rift sytem.Geological Society of London, Special Publication, No. 259, 336p. $ 200.00Africa, East AfricaMantle plume, paleomagnetism
DS200612-1615
2006
Zhou, J-C., Jiang, S-Y.Mesozoic bimodel volcanics in SE China: implications for both upwelling of asthenosphere and mantle crust interactions.Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, Vol. 70, 18, p. 23. abstract only.ChinaPlume
DS200612-1621
2006
Zorin, Y.A., Turutanov, E.K., Kozhevnikov, V.M., Rasskazov, S.V., Ivanov, A.V.Cenozoic upper mantle plumes in east Siberia and central Mongolia and subduction of the Pacific plate.Doklady Earth Sciences, Vol. 409, 5, pp. 723-726.Asia, Mongolia, Russia, SiberiaPlume
DS200612-1622
2006
Zorin, Yu.A., Turutanov, E.kh., Kozhevnikov, V.M., Rasskazov, S.V., Ivanov, A.I.The nature of Cenozoic upper mantle plumes in east Siberia and central Mongolia.Russian Geology and Geophysics, Vol. 47, 10, pp. 1046-1059.Russia, Siberia, MongoliaPlume, hot spots
DS200712-0076
2007
Betts, P.G., Giles, D., SChaefer, B.F., Mark, G.1600 -1500 Ma hotspot track in eastern Australia: implications for Mesoproterozoic continental reconstruction.Terra Nova, Vol. 19, 6, pp. 496-501.AustraliaHotspots, plumes
DS200712-0296
2006
Eriksson, P.G., Mazumder, R., Catuneanu, O., Bumby, A.J., Ilondo, B.O.Precambrian continental free board and geological evolution: a time perspective. Kaapvaal, Pilbara, SinghbhumEarth Science Reviews, in press availableMantle, South Africa, Australia, IndiaContinent freeboard, crustal growth, thickness, plumes
DS200712-0297
2007
Ernst, W.E.Speculations on evolution of the terrestrial lithosphere- asthenosphere system - plumes and plates.Gondwana Research, Vol. 11, 1-2, Jan. pp. 38-49.MantlePlume
DS200712-0324
2007
Foulger, G.R., Meyer, R.The European Cenozoic volcanic province: the type example of an implausible mantle plume (IMP)?AGU Fall meeting, December 10-14, 1p. abstract on mantleplumes.orgEurope, GermanyMantle plume
DS200712-0421
2007
Hatton, C., Hill, S., Apter, D., Evans, S., Hatch, D., Hauser, B.Measuring the width of the diamond window by logging the lithosphere with garnet compositions.Diamonds in Kimberley Symposium & Trade Show, Bristow and De Wit held August 23-24, Kimberley, South Africa, GSSA Diamond Workshop CD slides 27Africa, South AfricaGroup I,II kimberlites- plumes, peridotites, eclogites
DS200712-0602
2007
Le Roex, A.Kimberlite magmatism in southern Africa: what was the cause, and where is the source?Diamonds in Kimberley Symposium & Trade Show, Bristow and De Wit held August 23-24, Kimberley, South Africa, GSSA Diamond Workshop CD slides 22Africa, southern AfricaClassification, distribution, Group I,II magmas,plumes
DS200712-0691
2007
Maruyama, S., Santosh, M., Zhao, D.Superplume, supercontinent, and post perovskite: mantle dynamics and anti-plate tectonics on the core mantle boundary.Gondwana Research, Vol. 11, 1-2, Jan. pp. 7-37.MantlePlume
DS200712-0999
2007
Sleep, N.H.Origins of the plume hypothesis and some of its implications.Plates, plumes and Planetary Processes, pp. 29-46.MantlePlume models
DS200712-1040
2007
Steiner, S.A., Conrad, C.P.Does active mantle upwelling help drive plate motions?Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors, Vol. 161, 1-2, pp. 103-114.MantlePlume
DS200712-1232
2007
Zhao, D.Seismic images under 60 hotpots: search for mantle plumes.Gondwana Research, Vol. 12, 4, pp. 335-355.MantlePlume
DS200812-0030
2007
Anderson, D.L.Evidence for mantle plumes?Nature, Vol. 450, 7169, p. E15.MantlePlume
DS200812-0049
2008
Arzamastev, A.A., Glaznev, V.N.Plume lithosphere interaction in the presence of an ancient sublithospheric mantle keel: an example from the Kola alkaline province.Doklady Earth Sciences, Vol. 419A, no. 3, pp. 384-387.Russia, Kola PeninsulaMantle plume
DS200812-0053
2008
Ashchepkov, Pokhilenko, Vladykon, Loginova, Rotman, Afansiev, Kuligin, Malygina, Alymova, Stegnitsky, KhmetnikovaPlume interaction and evolution of the continental mantle lithosphere.Deep Seated Magmatism, its sources and plumes, Ed. Vladykin, N.V., 2008 pp. 104-121.MantlePlume
DS200812-0128
2008
Bosch, L., Becker, T.W., Steinberger, B.On the statistical significance of correlations between synthetic mantle plumes and tomographic models.Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors, in press available, 9p.MantleDynamics, plumes, hot spots, tompography
DS200812-0159
2007
Burke, K., Steinberger, B., Torsvik, T.H., Smethurst, M.A.Plume generation zones at the margins of large low shear velocity provinces on the core-mantle boundary.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 265, 1-2, pp. 49-60.MantleLPP, mantle plumes, hotspots
DS200812-0187
2008
Castro, A., Gerya, T.V.Magmatic implications of mantle wedge plumes: experimental study.Lithos, Vol. 103, 1-2, pp. 138-148.MantlePlume, magmatism
DS200812-0222
2008
Class, C.Hot arguments to cool off the plume debate?Geology, Vol. 36, 4, pp. 335-336.MantlePlume
DS200812-0339
2008
Farnetani, C.G., Hofmann, A.W.Length scales of isotope heterogeneities: from D' to a mantle plume conduit.Goldschmidt Conference 2008, Abstract p.A257.MantlePlume
DS200812-0443
2008
Halls, H.C., Davis, D.W., Stott, G.M., Ernst, R.E., Hamilton, M.A.The Paleoproterozoic Marathon large igneous province: new evidence for a 2.1 Ga long lived mantle plume event along the southern margin of the N.A. Superior ProvincePrecambrian Research, Vol. 162, 3-4, pp. 327-353.Canada, OntarioMantle plume
DS200812-0615
2008
Kumagai, I., Davaille, A., Kunta, K., Stutzmann, E.Mantle plumes: thin, fat, successful or failing? Constraints to explain hot spot volcanism through time and space.Geophysical Research Letters, Vol. 35, 16, L16301.MantlePlume
DS200812-0645
2008
Leng, W., Zhong, S.Controls on plume heat flux and plume excess temperature.Journal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 113, B4, B04408MantlePlume
DS200812-0742
2008
Meshesha, D., Shinjo, R.Rethinking geochemical feature of the Afar and Kenya mantle plumes and geodynamic implications.Journal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 113, B9209.AfricaEast Africa Rift sytem, plumes
DS200812-0745
2008
Mihalffy, P., Steinberger, B., Schmeling, H.The effect of the large scale mantle flow field on the Iceland hotspot track.Tectonophysics, Vol. 447, 1-4, pp. 5-18.Europe, IcelandHotspots, plumes
DS200812-0906
2008
Pokhilenko, N.P.Permo-Triassic superplume and its influence to the Siberian lithospheric mantle.Deep Seated Magmatism, its sources and plumes, Ed. Vladykin, N.V., 2008 pp. 41-53.Russia, SiberiaPlume, hot spots
DS200812-0980
2008
Rudge, J.F., Shaw Champion, M.E., White, N., McKenzie, D., Lovell, B.A plume model of transient diachronous uplift at the Earth's surface.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 267, 1-2, pp. 146-160.MantlePlume
DS200812-1003
2007
Sankaran, A.V.The unsettled plume hypothesis.Current Science, Vol. 91, 10, Nov. 25, pp. 1344-45.MantlePlume theory
DS200812-1081
2008
Sleep, N.H.Channeling at the base of the lithosphere during the lateral flow of plume material beneath flow-line hotspots.Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems: G3, in press available, 74p.MantlePlume
DS200812-1141
2008
Sun, D., Helmberger, D.Lower mantle superdomes and plumes.Goldschmidt Conference 2008, Abstract p.A914.MantlePlume
DS200812-1318
2008
Zhao, D.Multiscale seismic tomography and mantle dynamics.Gondwana Research, In press available, 27p.MantlePlume
DS200912-0085
2009
Bull, A.L., McNamara, A.K., Ritsema, J.Synthetic tomography of plume clusters and thermochemical piles.Earth and Planetary Interiors, Vol. 278, 3-4, pp. 152-162.MantlePlume
DS200912-0090
2009
Burov, E., Cloetingh, S.Controls of mantle plumes and lithospheric folding on modes of intraplate continental tectonics: differences and similarities.Geophysical Journal International, Vol. 178, bo. 3 Sept. oo, 1691-1722.MantlePlume, hot spots
DS200912-0155
2009
Davies, D.R., Davies, J.H.Thermally driven mantle plumes reconcile multiple hot spot observations.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 278, 1-2, Feb. 15, pp. 50-54.MantlePlume
DS200912-0189
2009
Duggen, K.A., Hoernle, F., Hauff, A., Klugel, M., Bouabdellah, Thirwall, M.F.Flow of Canary mantle plume material through a subcontinental lithospheric corridor beneath Africa to the Mediterranean.Geology, Vol. 37, 3, pp. 283-286.EuropePlume
DS200912-0221
2009
Fitton, G., Starkey, N.Hotspots and large igneous provinces: excess mantle temperature or mantle fertility?Goldschmidt Conference 2009, p. A382 Abstract.MantlePlume
DS200912-0245
2009
Gerlings, J., Funck, T., Jackson, R.H., Louden, K.E., Klingelhofer, F.Seismic evidence for plume derived volcanism during formation of the continental margin in southern Davis Strait and northern Labrador Sea.Geophysical Journal International, Vol. 176, 3, pp. 980-994.CanadaPlume
DS200912-0369
2009
Kerr, R.A.Scoping out unseen forces shaping North America.Science, Vol. 325, Sept. 25, pp. 1620-1621.United States, CanadaSlabs, subduction, plumes
DS200912-0411
2009
Kovalenko, V.I., Yarmolyk, V.V., Bogatikov, O.A.Regularities of spatial distribution of mantle hot spots of the modern Earth.Doklady Earth Sciences, Vol. 427, 2, pp. 924-928.MantlePlume
DS200912-0430
2009
Leahy, G.M.Local variability in the 410 km mantle discontinuity under a hotspot.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 288, 1-2, pp. 158-163.MantlePlume
DS200912-0433
2009
Lenardic, A., Jellinek, A.M.Tails of two plume types in one mantle.Geology, Vol. 37, 2, pp. 127-130.MantlePlume, hotspots
DS200912-0663
2009
Santosh, M., Maruyama, S., Omori, S.A fluid factory in solid Earth.Lithosphere, Vol. 1, no. 1, pp. 29-33.MantleTectonics, plumes
DS200912-0664
2009
Santosh, M., Maruyana, S., Yamamoto,S.The making and breaking od supercontinents: some speculations based on superplumes, super downwelling and the role of tectosphere.Gondwana Research, Vol. 15, 3-4, pp. 324-341.MantlePlume, hotspots
DS200912-0753
2009
Tewari, H.C., Surya Prakasa Rao, G., Pradsad, B.R.Uplifted crust in parts of western India.Journal of the Geological Society of India, Vol. 73, no. 4, April pp. 479-488.IndiaReunion Plume, geophysics - seismics
DS201012-0137
2010
Das Sharma, S., Ramesh, D.S., Li, X., Yuan, B., Sreenivas, B., Kind, R.Response of mantle transition zone thickness to plume bouyancy flux.Geophysical Journal International, Vol. 180, 1, pp. 49-58.MantlePlume
DS201012-0208
2010
Foulger, G.R.Plates vs plumes: a geological controversy.Wiley Blackwell, 364p. Oct. 2010 $ 130.00MantlePlume theories - book
DS201012-0411
2009
Kovalenko, V.I., Yarmolyuk, V.V., Bogatikov, O.A.Regularities of spatial distribution of mantle hot spots of the modern Earth.Deep Seated Magmatism, its sources and plumes, Ed. Vladykin, N.V., pp. 5-12.MantlePlume
DS201012-0425
2010
Lassak, T.M., McNamara, A.K., Garnero, E.J., Zhong, S.Core mantle boundary topography as a possible constraint on lower mantle chemistry and dynamics.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 289, pp. 232-241.MantleConvection, plumes
DS201012-0801
2010
Trubitsyn, V.P.A numerical experiment reproducing convection in the mantle with the generation and evolution of lithospheric plates, plumes and superplumes.Doklady Earth Sciences, Vol. 434, 2, pp.1370-1372.MantlePlume
DS201112-0014
2011
Allen, P.A.Surface impact of mantle processes.Nature Geoscience, Vol. 4, August pp. 498-499.MantleMantle plume
DS201112-0128
2011
Burke, K.Plate tectonics, the Wilson Cycle, and mantle plumes: geodynamics from the top.Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Vol. 39, pp. 1-29.MantleOverview - plumes
DS201112-0164
2011
Chalapathi Rao, N.V., Lehmann, B.Kimberlites, flood basalts and mantle plumes: new insights from the Deccan Large Igneous Province.Earth Science Reviews, Vol. 107, 3-4, pp. 207-444.IndiaBastar Craton , Reunion mantle plume, link
DS201112-0341
2011
Gaillou, E., Post, J.E., Butler, J.E.On the pecularities of Australian and Venezuelan pink diamonds: influence of the geologic settings.Goldschmidt Conference 2011, abstract p.882.Australia, South America, VenezuelaArgyle, Santa Elena, high thermal events
DS201112-0406
2011
Hamilton, W.B.Plate tectonics began in Neoproterozoic time, plumes from deep mantle have never opened.Lithos, In press available, 20p.MantlePlume
DS201112-0550
2010
Kovalenko, V.I., Yarmolyuk, V.V., Bogatikov, O.A.Modern volcanism in the Earth's northern hemisphere and its relation with the evolution of the North Pangaea modern supercontinent and with the spatial ... hotspotsPetrology, Vol. 18, 7, pp. 657-676.MantleMantle plume, deep subduction
DS201112-0911
2011
Santini, S., Tallarico, A., Dragoni, M.Magma ascent and effusion from a tensile fracture propogating to the Earth's urface.Geophysical Journal International, in press available,MantleMineral physics, rheology, heat flow, plumes
DS201112-0949
2011
Sherburn, J.A., Horstemeyer, M.F., Banmann, D.J., Baumgardner, J.R.Two dimensional mantle convection simulations using an internal state variable model: the role of a history dependent rheology on mantle convection.Geophysical Journal International, Vol. 186, 3, pp. 945-962.MantlePlume
DS201112-1058
2010
Trubitsyn, V.P., Kharybin, E.V.Thermochemical mantle plumes.Doklady Earth Sciences, Vol. 435, 2, pp. 1656-1658.MantlePlume, hotspots
DS201112-1090
2011
Viet Anh, T., Pang, K-N., Chung, S-L., Lin, H-M., Trong Hoa, T.The Song Da magmatic suite revisited: a petrologic, geochemical and Sr Nd isotopic study on picrites, flood basalts and silicic volcanic rocks.Journal of Asian Earth Sciences, Vol. 42, 6, pp. 1341-1355.ChinaPlume lithosphere interaction, ELIP
DS201212-0007
2012
Agrusta, R., Tommasi, A.Lithosphere thinning by small scale convection in a plume fed low viscosity layer beneath a moving plate.emc2012 @ uni-frankfurt.de, 1p. AbstractMantlePlume
DS201212-0206
2012
Foulger, G.R.Are 'hot spots' hot spots?Journal of Geodynamics, Vol. 58, pp. 1-28.MantlePlume
DS201212-0758
2012
Villemaire, M., Darbyshire, F.A., Bastow, I.D.P wave tomography of eastern North America: evidence for mantle evolution from Archean to Phanerozoic, and modification during subsequent hotspot tectonism.Journal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 117, B12302, 15p.Mantle, North America, CanadaTomography, plumes
DS201312-0197
2013
Day, J.M.D.Hotspot volcanism and highly siderophile elements.Chemical Geology, Vol. 341, pp. 50-74.MantlePlume
DS201312-0731
2013
Rampino, M.R., Prokoph, A.Are mantle plumes periodic?EOS Transaction of AGU, Vol. 94, 12, March 19, pp. 113-120.MantlePlume cycles
DS201312-0955
2013
Wang, X-C., Li, Z-X., Li, X-H., Xu, Y-G., Li, X-H.Diamond mining in Russia…. Chart of reserves.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 377-378, pp. 248-259.MantlePlume
DS201412-0084
2014
Burkett, E., Gurnis, M.Stalled slab dynamics.Lithosphere, Vol. 6, no. 1, pp. 92-97.MantlePlume
DS201412-0093
2014
Campbell, I.H., Griffiths, R.W.Did the formation of D" cause the Archean-Proterozoic transition?Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 388, pp. 1-8.MantlePlume, MgO
DS201412-0138
2014
Condie, K., Davaille, A.Mantle plumes and the supercontinent cycle.GAC-MAC Annual Meeting May, abstract 1p.MantlePlume
DS201412-0500
2014
Le Roex, Class, C.Metasomatism of the Pan-African lithospheric mantle beneath the Damara Belt, Namibia, by the Tristan mantle plume: geochemical evidence from mantle xenoliths.Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology, Vol. 168, pp. 1046-Africa, NamibiaPlume
DS201412-0511
2014
Li, Z-X., Zhong, S., Wang, X-C.Formation of mantle plumes and superplumes: driven by subduction?GAC-MAC Annual Meeting May, abstract 1p.MantlePlume
DS201412-0601
2013
Mueller, P.A., Mogk, D.W., Henry, D.J., Wooden, J.L., Foster, D.A.The plume to plate transition: Hadean and Archean crustal evolution in the northern Wyoming province, USA.Dilek & Furnes eds. Evolution of Archean crust and early life. Springer Publication, pp. 23-54.United StatesMantle plume
DS201412-0986
2013
Witze, A.Earth science: under the volcano. Geophysicists are scouring the globe for evidence of mantle plumes - the presumed source of some mega-eruptions.Nature, Vol. 504, 7479, pp. 206-207.MantlePlume
DS201412-1003
2014
Yang, T., Leng, W.Dynamics of hidden hotspot tracks beneath the continental lithosphere.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 401 pp. 294-300.MantlePlume
DS201502-0041
2014
Batanova, V.G., Lyaskovskaya, Z.E., Savelieva, G.N., Sobolev, A.V.Peridotites from the Kamchatsky Mys: evidence of oceanic mantle melting near a hotspot.Russian Geology and Geophysics, Vol. 55, pp. 1395-1403.RussiaHarzburgite, plumes

Abstract: A suite of mantle peridotites sampled in the Kamchatsky Mys includes spinel lherzolite, clinopyroxene-bearing harzburgite, and harzburgite. Mineral chemistry of olivine, chromian spinel, and clinopyroxene show strongly correlated element patterns typical of peridotite formed by 8% to more than 22% partial melting. Clinopyroxene in the Kamchatka peridotites is compositionally different from that of both abyssal and suprasubduction varieties: Clinopyroxene in lherzolite is depleted in LREE relative to abyssal peridotite and that in harzburgite has very low LREE and Sr unlike the subduction-related counterpart. These composition features indicate that the rocks ultra-depleted in basaltic components originated in the vicinity of a hotspot, possibly, proto-Hawaiian plume, which provided high temperature and melting degree of the MORB source mantle at mid-ocean ridge.
DS201502-0043
2015
Bogina, M., Zlobin, V., Sharkov, E., Chistyakov, A.Petrogenesis of siliceous high-Mg series rocks as exemplified by the Early Paleoproterozoic mafic volcanic rocks of the Eastern Baltic Shield: enriched mantle versus crustal contamination.Economic Geology Research Institute 2015, Vol. 17,, #3510, 1p. AbstractRussiaPlume geodynamics

Abstract: The Early Paleoproterozoic stage in the Earth's evolution was marked by the initiation of global rift systems, the tectonic nature of which was determined by plume geodynamics. These processes caused the voluminous emplacement of mantle melts with the formation of dike swarms, mafic-ultramafic layered intrusions, and volcanic rocks. All these rocks are usually considered as derivatives of SHMS (siliceous high-magnesian series). Within the Eastern Baltic Shield, the SHMS volcanic rocks are localized in the domains with different crustal history: in the Vodlozero block of the Karelian craton with the oldest (Middle Archean) crust, in the Central Block of the same craton with the Neoarchean crust, and in the Kola Craton with a heterogeneous crust. At the same time, these rocks are characterized by sufficiently close geochemical characteristics: high REE fractionation ((La/Yb)N = 4.9-11.7, (La/Sm)N=2.3-3.6, (Gd/Yb)N =1.66-2.74)), LILE enrichment, negative Nb anomaly, low to moderate Ti content, and sufficiently narrow variations in Nd isotope composition from -2.0 to -0.4 epsilon units. The tectonomagmatic interpretation of these rocks was ambiguous, because such characteristics may be produced by both crustal contamination of depleted mantle melts, and by generation from a mantle source metasomatized during previous subduction event. Similar REE patterns and overlapping Nd isotope compositions indicate that the studied basaltic rocks were formed from similar sources. If crustal contamination en route to the surface would play a significant role in the formation of the studied basalts, then almost equal amounts of contaminant of similar composition are required to produce the mafic rocks with similar geochemical signatures and close Nd isotopic compositions, which is hardly possible for the rocks spaced far apart in a heterogeneous crust. This conclusion is consistent with analysis of some relations between incompatible elements and their ratios. In particular, the rocks show no correlation between Th/Ta and La/Yb, (Nb/La)pm ratio and Th content, and eNd and (Nb/La)N ratio. At the same time, some correlation observed in the eNd-Mg# and (La/Sm)N-(Nb/La)N diagrams in combination with the presence of inherited zircons in the rocks does not allow us to discard completely the crustal contamination. Examination of Sm/Yb-La/Sm relations and the comparison with model melting curves for garnet and spinel lherzolites showed that the parental melts of the rocks were derived by 10-30% mantle melting at garnet-spinel facies transition. Two stage model can be proposed to explain such remarkable isotope-geochemical homogeneity of the mafic volcanic rocks over a large area: (1) ubiquitous emplacement of large volumes of sanukitoid melts in the lower crust of the shield at 2.7 Ga; (2) underplating of plume-derived DM melts at the crust-mantle boundary, melting of the lower crust of sanukitoid composition, and subsequent mixing of these melts with formation of SHMS melts at 2.4 Ga. A simple mixing model showed that in this case the Nd isotope composition of obtained melts remained practically unchanged at variable amounts of contaminant (up to 30%). This work was supported by the RFBR no. 14-05-00458.
DS201502-0124
2014
Wu, F.Y., Xu, Y., Zhu, X., Zhang, G.W.Thinning and destruction of the cratonic lithosphere: a global perspective.Science China Earth Sciences, Vol. 57, no. 12, pp. 2878-2890.China, GlobalPlume, subduction
DS201508-0364
2015
Li, H., Zhang, Z., Ernst, R., Lu, L., Santosh, M., Zhang, D., Cheng, Z.Giant radiating mafic dyke swarm of the Emeishan Large Igneous Province: identifying the mantle plume centre.Terra Nova, Vol. 27, 4, pp. 247-257.ChinaMantle plume
DS201509-0425
2015
Ryberg, T., Haberland, C., Haberlau, T., Weber, M.H., Klaus, B., Behrmann, J.H., Jokat, W.Crustal structure of northwest Namibia: evidence for plume rift continent interaction.Geology, Vol. 43, 8,pp. 739-Africa, NamibiaPlume, rifting

Abstract: The causes for the formation of large igneous provinces and hotspot trails are still a matter of considerable dispute. Seismic tomography and other studies suggest that hot mantle material rising from the core-mantle boundary (CMB) might play a significant role in the formation of such hotspot trails. An important area to verify this concept is the South Atlantic region, with hotspot trails that spatially coincide with one of the largest low-velocity regions at the CMB, the African large low shear-wave velocity province. The Walvis Ridge started to form during the separation of the South American and African continents at ca. 130 Ma as a consequence of Gondwana breakup. Here, we present the first deep-seismic sounding images of the crustal structure from the landfall area of the Walvis Ridge at the Namibian coast to constrain processes of plume-lithosphere interaction and the formation of continental flood basalts (Paraná and Etendeka continental flood basalts) and associated intrusive rocks. Our study identified a narrow region (<100 km) of high-seismic-velocity anomalies in the middle and lower crust, which we interpret as a massive mafic intrusion into the northern Namibian continental crust. Seismic crustal reflection imaging shows a flat Moho as well as reflectors connecting the high-velocity body with shallow crustal structures that we speculate to mark potential feeder channels of the Etendeka continental flood basalt. We suggest that the observed massive but localized mafic intrusion into the lower crust results from similar-sized variations in the lithosphere (i.e., lithosphere thickness or preexisting structures).
DS201510-1772
2015
Hand, E.Mantle plumes seen rising from Earth's core.Science, Vol. 349, 6252, pp. 1032-1033.MantlePlume

Abstract: Mantle plumes, tubes of hot rock rising from Earth's core, have come into focus, ending a more than 40-year-long debate. The result comes from a sophisticated MRI-like tomographic model that used 273 large earthquakes to illuminate the interior of Earth. It revealed as many as 28 plumes, many of them underneath known volcanic hot spots at Earth's surface. The plumes are fatter than expected, which means that they carry more heat away from Earth's core, an indication that plumes are important for cooling the planet. The model also shows that the plumes bend at a depth of 1000 kilometers, which could indicate an undiscovered mineral phase transition in the lower mantle that makes it less stiff.
DS201510-1810
2015
Trubitsyn, V.P., Evseev, M.N., Trubitsyn, A.P.Influence of continents and lithospheric plates on the shape of D" layer and the spatial distribution of mantle plumes.Russian Journal of Earth Sciences, Vol. 15, ES3001 8p.MantlePlume

Abstract: The regularities of the global intraplate volcanism of the Earth are explained by the mantle plumes originating at the heads and margins of two piles of dense material of the hot and relatively heavy D?? layer at the base of the mantle. Due to thermal blanket effect under a supercontinent the overheated region with ascending flows arises in the mantle. These flows distort the D?? layer and produce the thermochemical piles in the lowermost mantle under the supercontinent. It is supposed that the pile under Africa originated at the time of existence of Pangea, while the pile under the Pacific Ocean originated at the time of existence of Rodinia. As Africa succeeds to Pangea, the pile under Africa exists until now. But it stays unclear why the pile under the Pacific Ocean exists up to now despite supercontinent Rodinia has been broken-up a long time ago. The numerical models of thermochemical convection in the whole mantle with spherical geometry which include the heavy D?? layer allow to clear up effects of supercontinents and lithospheric plates on deformations of the D?? layer by mantle flows and formation of the thermochemical piles.
DS201512-1934
2015
Jenkins, J., Cottaar, S., White, R.S., Deuss, A.Depressed mantle discontinuities beneath Iceland: evidence of a garnet controlled 660 km discontinuity?Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 432, pp. 159-168.Europe, IcelandMantle plume

Abstract: The presence of a mantle plume beneath Iceland has long been hypothesised to explain its high volumes of crustal volcanism. Practical constraints in seismic tomography mean that thin, slow velocity anomalies representative of a mantle plume signature are difficult to image. However it is possible to infer the presence of temperature anomalies at depth from the effect they have on phase transitions in surrounding mantle material. Phase changes in the olivine component of mantle rocks are thought to be responsible for global mantle seismic discontinuities at 410 and 660 km depth, though exact depths are dependent on surrounding temperature conditions. This study uses P to S seismic wave conversions at mantle discontinuities to investigate variation in topography allowing inference of temperature anomalies within the transition zone. We employ a large data set from a wide range of seismic stations across the North Atlantic region and a dense network in Iceland, including over 100 stations run by the University of Cambridge. Data are used to create over 6000 receiver functions. These are converted from time to depth including 3D corrections for variations in crustal thickness and upper mantle velocity heterogeneities, and then stacked based on common conversion points. We find that both the 410 and 660 km discontinuities are depressed under Iceland compared to normal depths in the surrounding region. The depression of 30 km observed on the 410 km discontinuity could be artificially deepened by un-modelled slow anomalies in the correcting velocity model. Adding a slow velocity conduit of ?1.44% reduces the depression to 18 km; in this scenario both the velocity reduction and discontinuity topography reflect a temperature anomaly of 210 K. We find that much larger velocity reductions would be required to remove all depression on the 660 km discontinuity, and therefore correlated discontinuity depressions appear to be a robust feature of the data. While it is not possible to definitively rule out the possibility of uncorrected velocity anomalies causing the observed correlated topography we show that this is unlikely. Instead our preferred interpretation is that the 660 km discontinuity is controlled by a garnet phase transition described by a positive Clapeyron slope, such that depression of the 660 is representative of a hot anomaly at depth.
DS201602-0196
2016
Cagney, N., Crameri, F., Newsome, W.H., Lithgow-Bertelloni, C., Cotel, A., Hart, S.R., Whitehead, J.A.Constraining the source of mantle plumes.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 435, 1, pp. 55-63.MantlePlume

Abstract: In order to link the geochemical signature of hot spot basalts to Earth's deep interior, it is first necessary to understand how plumes sample different regions of the mantle. Here, we investigate the relative amounts of deep and shallow mantle material that are entrained by an ascending plume and constrain its source region. The plumes are generated in a viscous syrup using an isolated heater for a range of Rayleigh numbers. The velocity fields are measured using stereoscopic Particle-Image Velocimetry, and the concept of the ‘vortex ring bubble’ is used to provide an objective definition of the plume geometry. Using this plume geometry, the plume composition can be analysed in terms of the proportion of material that has been entrained from different depths. We show that the plume composition can be well described using a simple empirical relationship, which depends only on a single parameter, the sampling coefficient, scsc. High-scsc plumes are composed of material which originated from very deep in the fluid domain, while low-scsc plumes contain material entrained from a range of depths. The analysis is also used to show that the geometry of the plume can be described using a similarity solution, in agreement with previous studies. Finally, numerical simulations are used to vary both the Rayleigh number and viscosity contrast independently. The simulations allow us to predict the value of the sampling coefficient for mantle plumes; we find that as a plume reaches the lithosphere, 90% of its composition has been derived from the lowermost 260–750 km in the mantle, and negligible amounts are derived from the shallow half of the lower mantle. This result implies that isotope geochemistry cannot provide direct information about this unsampled region, and that the various known geochemical reservoirs must lie in the deepest few hundred kilometres of the mantle.
DS201602-0202
2015
Dobretsov, N.L.Periodicity and driving forces of volcanism.Russian Geology and Geophysics, Vol. 56, pp. 1663-1670.Global, JapanMantle plume

Abstract: The volume and style of volcanism change periodically, with cycles of three main scales, which have different causes and effects. Short cycles of volcanic activity last from tens to thousands of years and are associated with periodic accumulation of magma in shallow chambers and its subsequent eruptions. The eruptions either have internal causes or are triggered externally by variations in solar activity, tidal friction, and Earth’s rotation speed. Medium-scale cycles, hundreds of thousands to millions of years long, are due to changes in spreading and subduction rates. Long cycles (30–120 Ma) are related to ascent of mantle plumes, which take away material and heat from the core-mantle boundary and change the convection rate. These appear to be the major controls of the average periodicity. Acceleration of asthenospheric convection caused by periodic plume activity pulses can change spreading rates and, correspondingly, the relative positions of moving plates. The medium-scale periodicity of volcanism is illustrated by the examples of Kamchatka and Japan, where the intensity of subduction magmatism changes periodically in response to the opening of back-arc basins (Shikoku, Sea of Japan, and South Kurile basin).
DS201607-1341
2016
Davies, R.Do mantle plumes preserve the heterogeneous structure of their deep mantle source?IGC 35th., Session The Deep Earth 1 p. abstractMantlePlume, hot spots
DS201607-1360
2016
Li, Z-X.The life cycles of mantle plumes and superplumes: observations, modelling, and geodynamic implications.IGC 35th., Session A Dynamic Earth 1p. AbstractMantlePlume, hot spots
DS201701-0032
2016
Snow, J.E.Petit spots go big. Mantle enrichment processes.Nature Geoscience, Vol. 9, pp. 862-3.MantlePlume, hotspots

Abstract: Mantle enrichment processes were thought to be limited to parts of oceanic plates influenced by plumes and to continental interiors. Analyses of mantle fragments of the Pacific Plate suggest that such enrichment processes may operate everywhere.
DS201707-1331
2017
Gorczyk, W., Mole, D.R., Barnes, S.J.Plume lithosphere interaction at craton margins throughout Earth history.Tectonophysics, in press availableMantlecraton - plumes

Abstract: Intraplate continental magmatism represents a fundamental mechanism in Earth's magmatic, thermal, chemical and environmental evolution. It is a process intimately linked with crustal development, large-igneous provinces, metallogeny and major global environmental catastrophes. As a result, understanding the interactions of continental magmas through time is vital in understanding their effect on the planet. The interaction of mantle plumes with the lithosphere has been shown to significantly affect the location and form of continental magmatism, but only at modern mantle conditions. In this study, we perform numerical modelling for Late Archean (1600 °C), Paleoproterozoic (1550 °C), Meso-Neoproteroic (1500 °C) and Phanerozoic (1450 °C) mantle potential temperatures (Tp) to assess the time-space magmatic effects of ambient-mantle- and plume- lithosphere interaction over Earth's thermal history. Within these experiments, we impinge a mantle plume, with a time-appropriate Tp, onto a ‘step-like’ lithosphere, to evaluate the effect of craton margins on continental magmatism through time. The results of this modelling demonstrate that lithospheric architecture controls the volume and location of continental magmatism throughout Earth history, irrespective of ambient mantle or plume Tp. In all plume models, mantle starting plumes (diameter 300 km) impinge on the base of the lithosphere, and spread laterally over > 1600 km, flowing into the shallowest mantle, and producing the highest volume magmas. In ambient-mantle only models, Archean and Paleoproterozoic Tp values yield significant sub-lithospheric melt volumes, resulting in ‘passive’ geodynamic emplacement of basaltic magmatic provinces, whereas no melts are extracted at > 100 km for Meso-Neoproterozoic and Phanerozoic Tp. This indicates a major transition in non-subduction related continental magmatism from plume and ambient mantle to a plume-dominated source around the Mesoproterozoic. While the experiments presented here show the variation in plume-lithosphere interaction through time, the consistency in melt localisation indicates the lithosphere has been a first-order control on continental magmatism since its establishment in the Mesoarchean.
DS201707-1333
2016
Hassan, R., Muller, R.D., Gurnis, M., Williams, S.E., Flament, N.A rapid burst in hotspot motion through the interaction of tectonics and deep mantle flow.Nature Geoscience, Vol. 533, 7603, pp. 239-242.Mantleplumes

Abstract: Volcanic hotspot tracks featuring linear progressions in the age of volcanism are typical surface expressions of plate tectonic movement on top of narrow plumes of hot material within Earth’s mantle1. Seismic imaging reveals that these plumes can be of deep origin2—probably rooted on thermochemical structures in the lower mantle3, 4, 5, 6. Although palaeomagnetic and radiometric age data suggest that mantle flow can advect plume conduits laterally7, 8, the flow dynamics underlying the formation of the sharp bend occurring only in the Hawaiian–Emperor hotspot track in the Pacific Ocean remains enigmatic. Here we present palaeogeographically constrained numerical models of thermochemical convection and demonstrate that flow in the deep lower mantle under the north Pacific was anomalously vigorous between 100 million years ago and 50 million years ago as a consequence of long-lasting subduction systems, unlike those in the south Pacific. These models show a sharp bend in the Hawaiian–Emperor hotspot track arising from the interplay of plume tilt and the lateral advection of plume sources. The different trajectories of the Hawaiian and Louisville hotspot tracks arise from asymmetric deformation of thermochemical structures under the Pacific between 100 million years ago and 50 million years ago. This asymmetric deformation waned just before the Hawaiian–Emperor bend developed, owing to flow in the deepest lower mantle associated with slab descent in the north and south Pacific.
DS201707-1365
2017
Shortlle, O.Hot mantle rising.Nature Geoscience, Vol. 10, 6, p. 400.Mantleplumes
DS201707-1376
2017
Trela, J., Gazel, E., Sobolev, A.V., Moore, L., Bizimis, M.The hottest lavas of the Phanerozoic and the survival of Archean reservoirs.Nature Geoscience, Vol. 10, 6, pp. 451-456.Mantleplumes

Abstract: Large igneous provinces and some hotspot volcanoes are thought to form above thermochemical anomalies known as mantle plumes. Petrologic investigations that support this model suggest that plume-derived melts originated at high mantle temperatures (greater than 1,500?°C) relative to those generated at ambient mid-ocean ridge conditions (about 1,350?°C). Earth’s mantle has also cooled appreciably during its history and the temperatures of modern mantle derived melts are substantially lower than those produced during the Archaean (2.5 to 4.0 billion years ago), as recorded by komatiites (greater than 1,700?°C). Here we use geochemical analyses of the Tortugal lava suite to show that these Galapagos-Plume-related lavas, which formed 89 million years ago, record mantle temperatures as high as Archaean komatiites and about 400?°C hotter than the modern ambient mantle. These results are also supported by highly magnesian olivine phenocrysts and Al-in-olivine crystallization temperatures of 1,570 ± 20?°C. As mantle plumes are chemically and thermally heterogeneous, we interpret these rocks as the result of melting the hot core of the plume head that produced the Caribbean large igneous province. Our results imply that a mantle reservoir as hot as those responsible for some Archaean lavas has survived eons of convection in the deep Earth and is still being tapped by mantle plumes.
DS201707-1384
2017
Wyman, D.Do cratons preserve evidence of stagnant lid tectonics?Geoscience Frontiers, in press available 15p.Canada, Ontariomantle plumes

Abstract: Evidence for episodic crustal growth extending back to the Hadean has recently prompted a number of numerically based geodynamic models that incorporate cyclic changes from stagnant lid to mobile lid tectonics. A large part of the geologic record is missing for the times at which several of these cycles are inferred to have taken place. The cratons, however, are likely to retain important clues relating to similar cycles developed in the Mesoarchean and Neoarchean. Widespread acceptance of a form of plate tectonics by ?3.2 Ga is not at odds with the sporadic occurrence of stagnant lid tectonics after this time. The concept of scale as applied to cratons, mantle plumes and Neoarchean volcanic arcs are likely to provide important constraints on future models of Earth's geodynamic evolution. The Superior Province will provide some of the most concrete evidence in this regard given that its constituent blocks may have been locked into a stagnant lid relatively soon after their formation and then assembled in the next global plate tectonic interval. Perceived complexities associated with inferred mantle plume – volcanic arc associations in the Superior Province and other cratons may be related to an over estimation of plume size. A possible stagnant lid episode between ?2.9 Ga and ?2.8 Ga is identified by previously unexplained lapses in volcanism on cratons, including the Kaapvaal, Yilgarn and Superior Province cratons. If real, then mantle dynamics associated with this episode likely eliminated any contemporaneous mantle plume incubation sites, which has important implications for widespread plumes developed at ?2.7 Ga and favours a shallow mantle source in the transition zone. The Superior Province provides a uniquely preserved local proxy for this global event and could serve as the basis for detailed numerical models in the future.
DS201710-2221
2017
Chowdbury, P., Gerya, T., Chakraborty, S.Emergence of silicic continents as the lower crust peels off on a hot plate tectonic Earth.Nature Geoscience, Vol. 10, 9, pp. 698-703.Mantleplumes

Abstract: The rock record and geochemical evidence indicate that continental recycling has been occurring since the early history of the Earth. The stabilization of felsic continents in place of Earth’s early mafic crust about 3.0 to 2.0 billion years ago, perhaps due to the initiation of plate tectonics, implies widespread destruction of mafic crust during this time interval. However, the physical mechanisms of such intense recycling on a hotter, (late) Archaean and presumably plate-tectonic Earth remain largely unknown. Here we use thermomechanical modelling to show that extensive recycling via lower crustal peeling-off (delamination but not eclogitic dripping) during continent-continent convergence was near ubiquitous during the late Archaean to early Proterozoic. We propose that such destruction of the early mafic crust, together with felsic magmatism, may have caused both the emergence of silicic continents and their subsequent isostatic rise, possibly above the sea level. Such changes in the continental character have been proposed to influence the Great Oxidation Event and, therefore, peeling-off plate tectonics could be the geodynamic trigger for this event. A transition to the slab break-off controlled syn-orogenic recycling occurred as the Earth aged and cooled, leading to reduced recycling and enhanced preservation of the continental crust of present-day composition.
DS201710-2238
2017
Li, M., Zhong, S.The source location of mantle plumes from 3D spherical models of mantle convection.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 478, pp. 47-58.Mantleplumes

Abstract: Mantle plumes are thought to originate from thermal boundary layers such as Earth's core-mantle boundary (CMB), and may cause intraplate volcanism such as large igneous provinces (LIPs) on the Earth's surface. Previous studies showed that the original eruption sites of deep-sourced LIPs for the last 200 Myrs occur mostly above the margins of the seismically-observed large low shear velocity provinces (LLSVPs) in the lowermost mantle. However, the mechanism that leads to the distribution of the LIPs is not clear. The location of the LIPs is largely determined by the source location of mantle plumes, but the question is under what conditions mantle plumes form outside, at the edges, or above the middle of LLSVPs. Here, we perform 3D geodynamic calculations and theoretical analyses to study the plume source location in the lowermost mantle. We find that a factor of five decrease of thermal expansivity and a factor of two increase of thermal diffusivity from the surface to the CMB, which are consistent with mineral physics studies, significantly reduce the number of mantle plumes forming far outside of thermochemical piles (i.e., LLSVPs). An increase of mantle viscosity in the lowermost mantle also reduces number of plumes far outside of piles. In addition, we find that strong plumes preferentially form at/near the edges of piles and are generally hotter than that forming on top of piles, which may explain the observations that most LIPs occur above LLSVP margins. However, some plumes originated at pile edges can later appear above the middle of piles due to lateral movement of the plumes and piles and morphologic changes of the piles. ?65-70% strong plumes are found within 10 degrees from pile edges in our models. Although plate motion exerts significant controls over the large-scale mantle convection in the lower mantle, mantle plume formation at the CMB remains largely controlled by thermal boundary layer instability which makes it difficult to predict geographic locations of most mantle plumes. However, all our models show consistently strong plumes originating from the lowermost mantle beneath Iceland, supporting a deep mantle plume origin of the Iceland volcanism.
DS201711-2497
2017
Adam, C., Caddick, M.J., King, S.D.Pyroxenite causes fat plumes and stagnant slabs.Geophysical Research Letters, DOI: 10.1003/ 2017GL072943Mantleplumes

Abstract: Conventional wisdom holds that there is a change in the pattern of mantle convection between 410 and at 660 km, where structural transformations convert olivine into its high-pressure polymorphs. In this regard, recent tomographic studies have been a complete surprise, revealing (i) rapid broadening of slow seismic anomalies beneath hotspots from hundreds of kilometers wide at shallow depths to 2000-3000 km wide deeper than ~800 km, and (ii) fast seismic anomalies associated with subducted lithosphere that appear to flounder at 800-1000 km. It is difficult to reconcile these observations with the conventional view of a mantle that experiences limited mineralogical change below 660 km. Here we propose that plumes and slabs contain significant proportions of lithologies that experience an entirely different suite of mineral reactions, demonstrating that both subducted basalt and pyroxenite upwelling in plumes experience substantial changes in mineralogy and thus physical properties at ~800 km depth. We show the importance of this for mantle rheology and dynamics and how it can explain hitherto puzzling mantle tomographic results.
DS201711-2532
2017
Trela, J., Gazel, E., Sobolev, A.V., Moore, L., Bizimis, M., Jicha, B., Batanova, V.G.The hottest lavas of the Phanerozoic and the survival of deep Archean reservoirs.Nature Geoscience, Vol. 10, pp. 451-456.Mantlegeodynamics - plumes

Abstract: Large igneous provinces and some hotspot volcanoes are thought to form above thermochemical anomalies known as mantle plumes. Petrologic investigations that support this model suggest that plume-derived melts originated at high mantle temperatures (greater than 1,500?°C) relative to those generated at ambient mid-ocean ridge conditions (about 1,350?°C). Earth’s mantle has also cooled appreciably during its history and the temperatures of modern mantle derived melts are substantially lower than those produced during the Archaean (2.5 to 4.0 billion years ago), as recorded by komatiites (greater than 1,700?°C). Here we use geochemical analyses of the Tortugal lava suite to show that these Galapagos-Plume-related lavas, which formed 89 million years ago, record mantle temperatures as high as Archaean komatiites and about 400?°C hotter than the modern ambient mantle. These results are also supported by highly magnesian olivine phenocrysts and Al-in-olivine crystallization temperatures of 1,570 ± 20?°C. As mantle plumes are chemically and thermally heterogeneous, we interpret these rocks as the result of melting the hot core of the plume head that produced the Caribbean large igneous province. Our results imply that a mantle reservoir as hot as those responsible for some Archaean lavas has survived eons of convection in the deep Earth and is still being tapped by mantle plumes.
DS201801-0019
2017
Gorczyk, W., Mole, D.R., Barnes, S.J.Plume lithosphere interaction at craton margins throughout Earth history.Tectonophysics, in press available, 17p.Mantleplume

Abstract: Intraplate continental magmatism represents a fundamental mechanism in Earth's magmatic, thermal, chemical and environmental evolution. It is a process intimately linked with crustal development, large-igneous provinces, metallogeny and major global environmental catastrophes. As a result, understanding the interactions of continental magmas through time is vital in understanding their effect on the planet. The interaction of mantle plumes with the lithosphere has been shown to significantly affect the location and form of continental magmatism, but only at modern mantle conditions. In this study, we perform numerical modelling for Late Archean (1600 °C), Paleoproterozoic (1550 °C), Meso-Neoproteroic (1500 °C) and Phanerozoic (1450 °C) mantle potential temperatures (Tp) to assess the time-space magmatic effects of ambient-mantle- and plume- lithosphere interaction over Earth's thermal history. Within these experiments, we impinge a mantle plume, with a time-appropriate Tp, onto a ‘step-like’ lithosphere, to evaluate the effect of craton margins on continental magmatism through time. The results of this modelling demonstrate that lithospheric architecture controls the volume and location of continental magmatism throughout Earth history, irrespective of ambient mantle or plume Tp. In all plume models, mantle starting plumes (diameter 300 km) impinge on the base of the lithosphere, and spread laterally over > 1600 km, flowing into the shallowest mantle, and producing the highest volume magmas. In ambient-mantle only models, Archean and Paleoproterozoic Tp values yield significant sub-lithospheric melt volumes, resulting in ‘passive’ geodynamic emplacement of basaltic magmatic provinces, whereas no melts are extracted at > 100 km for Meso-Neoproterozoic and Phanerozoic Tp. This indicates a major transition in non-subduction related continental magmatism from plume and ambient mantle to a plume-dominated source around the Mesoproterozoic. While the experiments presented here show the variation in plume-lithosphere interaction through time, the consistency in melt localisation indicates the lithosphere has been a first-order control on continental magmatism since its establishment in the Mesoarchean.
DS201802-0281
2018
Wyman, D.Do cratons preserve evidence of stagnant lid tectonics? Superior ProvinceGeoscience Frontiers, Vol. 9, pp. 3-17.Mantleplumes

Abstract: Evidence for episodic crustal growth extending back to the Hadean has recently prompted a number of numerically based geodynamic models that incorporate cyclic changes from stagnant lid to mobile lid tectonics. A large part of the geologic record is missing for the times at which several of these cycles are inferred to have taken place. The cratons, however, are likely to retain important clues relating to similar cycles developed in the Mesoarchean and Neoarchean. Widespread acceptance of a form of plate tectonics by ?3.2 Ga is not at odds with the sporadic occurrence of stagnant lid tectonics after this time. The concept of scale as applied to cratons, mantle plumes and Neoarchean volcanic arcs are likely to provide important constraints on future models of Earth's geodynamic evolution. The Superior Province will provide some of the most concrete evidence in this regard given that its constituent blocks may have been locked into a stagnant lid relatively soon after their formation and then assembled in the next global plate tectonic interval. Perceived complexities associated with inferred mantle plume - volcanic arc associations in the Superior Province and other cratons may be related to an over estimation of plume size. A possible stagnant lid episode between ?2.9 Ga and ?2.8 Ga is identified by previously unexplained lapses in volcanism on cratons, including the Kaapvaal, Yilgarn and Superior Province cratons. If real, then mantle dynamics associated with this episode likely eliminated any contemporaneous mantle plume incubation sites, which has important implications for widespread plumes developed at ?2.7 Ga and favours a shallow mantle source in the transition zone. The Superior Province provides a uniquely preserved local proxy for this global event and could serve as the basis for detailed numerical models in the future.
DS201803-0455
2018
Jackson, C.R., Bennett, N.R., Du, Z., Cottrell, E., Fei, Y.Early episodes of high pressure core formation preserved in plume mantle.Nature , Vol. 553, 7689, pp. 491-495.Mantleplumes

Abstract: The decay of short-lived iodine (I) and plutonium (Pu) results in xenon (Xe) isotopic anomalies in the mantle that record Earth’s earliest stages of formation1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8. Xe isotopic anomalies have been linked to degassing during accretion2,3,4, but degassing alone cannot account for the co-occurrence of Xe and tungsten (W) isotopic heterogeneity in plume-derived basalts9,10 and their long-term preservation in the mantle. Here we describe measurements of I partitioning between liquid Fe alloys and liquid silicates at high pressure and temperature and propose that Xe isotopic anomalies found in modern plume rocks (that is, rocks with elevated 3He/4He ratios) result from I/Pu fractionations during early, high-pressure episodes of core formation. Our measurements demonstrate that I becomes progressively more siderophile as pressure increases, so that portions of mantle that experienced high-pressure core formation will have large I/Pu depletions not related to volatility. These portions of mantle could be the source of Xe and W anomalies observed in modern plume-derived basalts2,3,4,9,10. Portions of mantle involved in early high-pressure core formation would also be rich in FeO11,12, and hence denser than ambient mantle. This would aid the long-term preservation of these mantle portions, and potentially points to their modern manifestation within seismically slow, deep mantle reservoirs13 with high 3He/4He ratios.
DS201809-2026
2018
Gibson, S.A., Richards, M.A.Delivery of deep sourced, volatile rich plume material to the global ridge system.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 499, pp. 205-218.Oceanplumes, hotspots

Abstract: The global mid-ocean ridge (MOR) system represents a major site for outgassing of volatiles from Earth's mantle. The amount of H2O released via eruption of mid-ocean ridge basalts varies along the global ridge system and greatest at sites of interaction with mantle plumes. These deep-sourced thermal anomalies affect approximately one-third of all MORs - as reflected in enrichment of incompatible trace elements, isotope signatures and elevated ridge topography (excess melting) - but the physical mechanisms involved are controversial. The “standard model” involves solid-state flow interaction, wherein an actively upwelling plume influences the divergent upwelling generated by a mid-ocean ridge so that melting occurs at higher pressures and in greater amounts than at a normal spreading ridge. This model does not explain, however, certain enigmatic features including linear volcanic ridges radiating from the active plume to the nearby MOR. Examples of these are the Wolf-Darwin lineament (Galápagos), Rodrigues Ridge (La Réunion), Discovery Ridge (Discovery), and numerous smaller ridge-like structures associated with the Azores and Easter-Salas y Gómez hot spots. An important observation from our study is that fractionation-corrected MORB with exceptionally-high H2O contents (up to 1.3 wt.%) are found in close proximity to intersections of long-lived plume-related volcanic lineaments with spreading centres. New algorithms in the rare-earth element inversion melting (INVMEL) program allow us to simulate plume-ridge interactions by mixing the compositions of volatile-bearing melts generated during both active upwelling and passively-driven corner-flow. Our findings from these empirical models suggest that at sites of plume-ridge interaction, moderately-enriched MORBs (with 0.2-0.4 wt.% H2O) result from mixing of melts formed by: (i) active upwelling of plume material to minimum depths of ?35 km; and (ii) those generated by passive melting at shallower depths beneath the ridge. The most volatile-rich MORB (0.4-1.3 wt.% H2O) may form by the further addition of up to 25% of “deep” small-fraction plume stem melts that contain >3 wt.% H2O. We propose that these volatile-rich melts are transported directly to nearby MOR segments via pressure-induced, highly-channelised flow embedded within a broader “puddle” of mostly solid-state plume material, spreading beneath the plate as a gravity flow. This accounts for the short wavelength variability (over 10s of km) in geochemistry and bathymetry that is superimposed on the much larger (many 100s of km) “waist width” of plume-influenced ridge. Melt channels may constitute a primary delivery mechanism for volatiles from plume stems to nearby MORs and, in some instances, be expressed at the surface as volcanic lineaments and ridges. The delivery of small-fraction hydrous melts from plume stems to ridges via a two-phase (melt-matrix) regime implies that a parallel, bimodal transport system is involved at sites of plume-ridge interaction. We estimate that the rate of emplacement of deep-sourced volatile-rich melts in channels beneath the volcanic lineaments is high and involves 10s of thousands of km3/Ma. Since mantle plumes account for more than half of the melt production at MORs our findings have important implications for our understanding of deep Earth volatile cycling.
DS201811-2584
2018
Kosarev, G., Oreshin, S., Vinnik, L., Makeyeva, L.Mantle transition zone beneath the central Tien Shan: lithospheric delamination and mantle plumes.Tectonophysics, Vol. 723, 1, pp. 172-177.Chinaplumes

Abstract: We investigate structure of the mantle transition zone (MTZ) under the central Tien Shan in central Asia by using recordings of seismograph stations in Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan and adjacent northern China. We apply P-wave receiver functions techniques and evaluate the differential time between the arrivals of seismic phases that are formed by P to SV mode conversion at the 410-km and 660-km seismic boundaries. The differential time is sensitive to the thickness of the MTZ and insensitive to volumetric velocity anomalies above the 410-km boundary. Under part of the southern central Tien Shan with the lowest S wave velocity in the uppermost mantle and the largest thickness of the crust, the thickness of the MTZ increases by 15-20 km relative to the ambient mantle and the reference model IASP91. The increased thickness is a likely effect of low (about ? 150 K) temperature. This anomaly is indicative of delamination and sinking of the mantle lithosphere. The low temperature in the MTZ might also be a relic of subduction of the oceanic lithosphere in the Paleozoic, but this scenario requires strong coupling and coherence between structures in the MTZ and in the lithosphere during plate motions in the last 300 Myr. Our data reveal a reduction of thickness of the MTZ of 10-15 km under the Fergana basin, in the neighborhood of the region of small-scale basaltic volcanism at the time near the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary. The reduced thickness of the MTZ is the effect of a depressed 410-km discontinuity, similar to that found in many hotspots. This depression suggests a positive temperature anomaly of about 100-150 K, consistent with the presence of a thermal mantle plume. A similar depression on the 410-km discontinuity is found underneath the Tarim basin.
DS201811-2593
2018
Martos, Y.M., Jordan, T.A., Catalan, M., Jordan, T.M., Bamber, J.L., Vaughan, D.G.Geothermal heat flux reveals the Iceland hotspot track underneath Greenland.Geophysical Research Letters, Vol. 45, 16, pp. 8214-8222.Europe, Greenlandplumes

Abstract: Heat escaping from the Earth's interior provides important clues about areas of geology and geodynamics. In addition, where a region is covered by an ice sheet, such as Greenland, variations in the heat supplied from the Earth's interior can potentially influence how the ice flows, and hence its future changes. Unfortunately, in ice covered regions direct measurements of heat flow are limited to sparse boreholes, meaning this important quantity is poorly understood. In this study we used variations in the Earth's magnetic field to map out the variations in the amount of heat being supplied to the base of the Greenland Ice Sheet from the Earth's interior. Ice sheet models incorporating these new and improved results will help better constrain future predictions of ice sheet evolution. Overall, the new map not only shows less extreme variations than previous studies, but also reveals a previously unseen band of warmer than expected rock stretching northwest to southeast across Greenland. This band, together with lithospheric models derived from gravity data, is interpreted to be the scar left as the Greenland tectonic plate moved over a region of hot upwelling mantle (the material beneath the tectonic plates), which now underlies Iceland.
DS201904-0788
2019
Torsvik, T.H.Earth history: a journey in time and space from base to top.Tectonophysics, in press available, 11p.Mantleplumes, geodynamics

Abstract: The invention of a robust and accurate sea-going chronometer transformed navigation in the mid-eighteenth century. The calibration of longitude against the prime meridian at Greenwich, in combination with latitude derived from the positions of celestial bodies gave mariners for the first time confidence that they could calculate their position on the Earth's surface. Until recently, Earth scientists have been in a comparable position of having no way of calculating the longitudes of continents before the Cretaceous. Here I discuss Phanerozoic polar wander and paleogeographies and describe ways of quantitatively establishing ancient longitudes which also establish how the Earth's interior can be linked to its surface in geological time. The first method makes use of the fact that longitudinal uncertainty of continents that were assembled in Pangea can, for subsequent times, be eliminated, if longitude motion is known for only one of these continents. The best assumption is zero-longitude motion for Africa and with this assumption we can show that large igneous provinces (LIPs) and kimberlites almost exclusively erupted above the margins of TUZO and JASON in the lower mantle. This remarkable observation, also considering the effect of true polar wander, has led to a second method the plume generation zone reconstruction method unlocking a way forward in modelling absolute plate motions before Pangea and exploring links between plate tectonics, intra-plate volcanism and Deep Earth dynamics. Conceptually, that link can be viewed as a simple mass-balance: subducted lithosphere slabs restore mass to the mantle and trigger the return flow toward the surface including mantle plumes rising from the margins of TUZO and JASON. The surface manifestations of plumes are hotspot lavas, kimberlites and LIPs.
DS201908-1776
2019
Ernst, R.E., Liikane, D.A., Jowitt, S.M., Buchan, K.L., Blanchard, J.A.A new plumbing system framework for mantle plume related continental large igneous provinces and their mafic ultramafic intrusions.Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, in press available 34p. PdfGlobalmantle plumes, hotspots

Abstract: The magmatic components of continental Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs) include flood basalts and their plumbing system of giant mafic dyke swarms (radiating, linear, and the recently discovered circumferential type), mafic sill provinces, a lower crustal magmatic underplate, mafic-ultramafic (M-UM) intrusions, associated silicic magmatism, and associated carbonatites and kimberlites. This paper proposes a new plumbing system framework for mantle plume-related continental LIPs that incorporates all of these components, and provides a context for addressing key thematic aspects such as tracking magma batches "upstream" and "downstream" and their geochemical evolution, assessing the setting of M-UM intrusions and their economic potential, interpreting deep magmatic component identified by geophysical signatures, and estimating magnitudes of extrusive and intrusive components with climate change implications. This plumbing system model, and its associated implications, needs to be tested against the rapidly improving LIP record.
DS201908-1821
2019
Wang, C., Song, S., Wei, C., Su, L., Allen, M.B., Niu, Y., Li, X-H., Dong, J.Paleoarchean deep mantle heterogeneity recorded by enriched plume remnants.Nature Geoscience, doi.org/10.1038/s41561-019-0410-y 10p pdfMantlePlumes, hotspots

Abstract: The thermal and chemical state of the early Archaean deep mantle is poorly resolved due to the rare occurrences of early Archaean magnesium-rich volcanic rocks. In particular, it is not clear whether compositional heterogeneity existed in the early Archaean deep mantle and, if it did, how deep mantle heterogeneity formed. Here we present a geochronological and geochemical study on a Palaeoarchaean ultramafic-mafic suite (3.45-Gyr-old) with mantle plume signatures in Longwan, Eastern Hebei, the North China Craton. This suite consists of metamorphosed cumulates and basalts. The meta-basalts are iron rich and show the geochemical characteristics of present-day oceanic island basalt and unusually high mantle potential temperatures (1,675?°C), which suggests a deep mantle source enriched in iron and incompatible elements. The Longwan ultramafic-mafic suite is best interpreted as the remnants of a 3.45-Gyr-old enriched mantle plume. The first emergence of mantle-plume-related rocks on the Earth 3.5-3.45?billion years ago indicates that a global mantle plume event occurred with the onset of large-scale deep mantle convection in the Palaeoarchaean. Various deep mantle sources of these Palaeoarchaean mantle-plume-related rocks imply that significant compositional heterogeneity was present in the Palaeoarchaean deep mantle, most probably introduced by recycled crustal material.
DS201909-2070
2019
Pandey, R., Pandey, A., Chalapathi Rao, N.V., Belyatsky, B., Choudhary, A.K., Lehmann, B., Pandit, D., Dhote, P.Petrogenesis of end-Cretaceous/Early Eocene lamprophyres from the Deccan Large igneous province: constraints on plume-lithosphere interaction and the post-Deccan lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary ( LAB) beneath NW India.Lithos, Vol. 346-347, 19p. PdfIndiaplumes

Abstract: We present petrology, geochemistry and radiogenic isotope (Sr and Nd) data of thirteen post-Deccan lamprophyre dykes in the Narmada rift zone from the Chhotaudepur alkaline province of the Deccan Large Igneous Province (DLIP). Mineralogically, these dykes show affinity towards alkaline (sannaite and camptonite) as well as ultramafic (damtjernite) varieties of lamprophyres. Their major oxides and certain trace element ratios increase with increasing silica content highlighting the strong influence of fractionation processes. Their Nb/U and Ce/Pb ratios are similar to the mantle array defined by MORBs and OIBs and suggests an uncontaminated nature. Major oxide (K2O, Na2O, SiO2 and TiO2) contents show geochemical similarity towards shoshonitic volcanic series, whereas elevated Zr/Hf and Nb/La coupled with suppressed Rb/Nb and Zr/b display their affinity towards HIMU-type intraplate basalts. Their radiogenic initial 87Sr/86Sr (0.706034-0.710582) and sub-chondritic initial ?Nd (?8.6 to 2.1) are akin to those of the (i) ca. 65?Ma Ambadongar carbonatite, NW India, and (ii) ca. 65?Ma orangeites from Bastar Craton, central India, highlighting an enriched lithospheric mantle source. REE inversion modeling suggests ~3% enrichment of an undepleted mantle followed by small degrees of melting of this enriched mantle source are sufficient- as in the case of ocean island basalts (OIB)- to reproduce their observed REE concentrations. Their TDM Nd model ages (564-961?Ma) are consistent with widespread convergent margin-related magmatism during the amalgamation of the Rodinia supercontinent. We propose that enriched lithospheric mantle developed during the Neoproterozoic was metasomatized by small-volume CO2-rich melts imparting a HIMU-type geochemical character during Late Cretaceous, when the mantle plume (viz., Réunion) responsible for the flood basalt eruption, impinged at the base of the NW Indian lithosphere. From the presence of F-rich apatite and high K/Rb in mica, we infer the (i) presence of F-phlogopite in their source regions, and (ii) that the depth of post-Deccan lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary (LAB) beneath NW India was at least ~100?km at ca. 65?Ma.
DS201909-2071
2019
Parai, R., Mukhopadhyay, S., Tucker, J.M., Peto, M.K.The emerging portrait of an ancient, heterogeneous and continuously evolving mantle plume source.Lithos, Vol. 346-347, 16p. PdfMantleplumes

Abstract: Heterogeneity in the lithophile isotopic compositions of ocean island basalts (OIBs) has long been ascribed to the incorporation of recycled materials into the plume source. OIB heterogeneity indicates that plumes do not sample a pristine primordial reservoir, but rather sample an inhomogeneous mixture of primordial and recycled material generated by convective processes over Earth history. Here we present a synthesis of new insights into the characteristics and nature of the plume mantle source. Recent high precision noble gas data demonstrate that the origin of the reservoir supplying noble gases to plumes is fundamentally distinct from that of the mid-ocean ridge basalt (MORB) mantle reservoir: the two reservoirs cannot be related simply by differential degassing or incorporation of recycled atmospheric volatiles. Based on differences observed in the extinct 129I-129Xe system (t1/2 of 15.7?Ma), the mantle source supplying noble gases to plumes differentiated from the MORB source within ~100?Ma of the start of the Solar System, and the two sources have not been homogenized by 4.45?Ga of mantle convection. Thus, the 129I-129Xe data require a plume source that has experienced limited direct mixing with the MORB source mantle. Analysis of mantle source Xe isotopic compositions of plume-influenced samples with primordial He and Ne indicates that the plume source Xe budget is dominated by regassed atmospheric Xe. He and Ne isotopes are not sensitive to regassing due to low overall concentrations of He and Ne in recycled material relative to primordial material. Therefore, plume-influenced samples with primitive He and Ne isotopic compositions do not necessarily reflect sampling of pristine primordial mantle and the lithophile compositions of these samples should not be taken to represent undifferentiated mantle. In addition to recycled atmospheric Xe, the plume mantle source exhibits high ratios of Pu-fission Xe to U-fission Xe. The high proportion of Pu-fission Xe independently confirms a low extent of degassing of the plume source relative to the MORB source. Heavy noble gases illustrate that the mantle reservoir sampled by plumes is fundamentally distinct from the MORB mantle and reflects ongoing degassing of, and incorporation of recycled material into, an ancient (>4.45?Ga) primordial source. If plumes are derived from large low shear-wave velocity provinces (LLSVPs), then these seismically-imaged structures are ancient and long-lived.
DS201910-2271
2019
Kelvey, J.Leaky at the core.EOS, 100, Sept. 23, https://doi.org/10.1029/2019EO133401 8p.Mantlemantle plumes, hotspots

Abstract: Earth’s core is a hot, dense reservoir driving geological processes from the heart of our planet. The core is often described in two parts: a solid iron-nickel inner core surrounded by a liquid outer core of similar alloys. Convective currents in the outer core generate Earth’s magnetic field, preventing the planet’s atmosphere from being stripped away by the solar wind and making life on Earth possible. But sitting beneath our feet under 2,900 kilometers of rock, Earth’s core is more inaccessible than the surface of Mars. No probe can directly sample the core-mantle boundary, and the planet’s inner structure has been deduced from seismology, not observation. There may, however, be a work-around.
DS201910-2295
2019
Rizo, H., Abdrault, D., Bennett, N.R., Humayun, M., Brandon, A., Vlastelic, I., Moine, B., Poirier, A., Bouhifd, M.A., Murphy, D.T.182W evidence for core-mantle interaction in the source of mantle plumes.Geochemical Perspectives Letters, Vol. 11, pp. 6-11.Mantlemantle plumes, hotspots

Abstract: Tungsten isotopes are the ideal tracers of core-mantle chemical interaction. Given that W is moderately siderophile, it preferentially partitioned into the Earth’s core during its segregation, leaving the mantle depleted in this element. In contrast, Hf is lithophile, and its short-lived radioactive isotope 182Hf decayed entirely to 182W in the mantle after metal-silicate segregation. Therefore, the 182W isotopic composition of the Earth’s mantle and its core are expected to differ by about 200 ppm. Here, we report new high precision W isotope data for mantle-derived rock samples from the Paleoarchean Pilbara Craton, and the Réunion Island and the Kerguelen Archipelago hotspots. Together with other available data, they reveal a temporal shift in the 182W isotopic composition of the mantle that is best explained by core-mantle chemical interaction. Core-mantle exchange might be facilitated by diffusive isotope exchange at the core-mantle boundary, or the exsolution of W-rich, Si-Mg-Fe oxides from the core into the mantle. Tungsten-182 isotope compositions of mantle-derived magmas are similar from 4.3 to 2.7 Ga and decrease afterwards. This change could be related to the onset of the crystallisation of the inner core or to the initiation of post-Archean deep slab subduction that more efficiently mixed the mantle.
DS201911-2567
2019
Stracke, A., Genske, F., Berndt, J., Koornneef, J.M.Ubiquitous ultra-depleted domains in Earth's mantle. Azores plumeNature Geosciences, Vol. 12, pp. 851-855.Mantlehot spots, plumes

Abstract: Partial melting of Earth’s mantle generates oceanic crust and leaves behind a chemically depleted residual mantle. The time-integrated composition of this chemically depleted mantle is generally inferred from basalts produced at mid-ocean ridges. However, isotopic differences between oceanic mantle rocks and mid-ocean ridge basalts suggest that mantle and basalt composition could differ. Here we measure neodymium isotope ratios in olivine-hosted melt inclusions from lavas of the Azores mantle plume. We find neodymium isotope ratios that include the highest values measured in basalts, and suggest that melts from ultra-depleted mantle contribute to the isotopic diversity of the erupted lavas. Ultra-depleted melts have exceedingly low preservation potential during magma extraction and evolution due to progressive mixing with melts that are enriched in incompatible elements. A notable contribution of ultra-depleted melts to the Azores mantle plume therefore implies that variably depleted mantle is the volumetrically dominant component of the Azores plume. We argue that variably depleted mantle, sometimes ranging to ultra-depleted compositions, may be a ubiquitous part of most ocean island and mid-ocean ridge basalt sources. If so, Earth’s mantle may be more depleted than previously thought, which has important implications for the rate of mass exchange between crust and mantle, plume dynamics and compositional stratification of Earth’s mantle.Depleted mantle is a volumetrically dominant component of the Azores plume and possibly of oceanic basalt sources more generally, according to neodymium isotope compositions of olivine-hosted melt inclusions from lavas of the Azores mantle plume.
DS201912-2784
2019
Gilfillan, S.M.V., Gyore, D., Flude, S., Johnson, G., Bond, C.E., Hicks, N., Lister, R., Jones, D.G., Kremer, Y., Hazeldine, R.S., Stuart, F.M.Noble gases confirm plume related mantle degassing beneath southern Africa.Nature Communications, Vol. 10, 1, 10.1038/s41467-019-1244-6Africa, South Africaplumes

Abstract: Southern Africa is characterised by unusually elevated topography and abnormal heat flow. This can be explained by thermal perturbation of the mantle, but the origin of this is unclear. Geophysics has not detected a thermal anomaly in the upper mantle and there is no geochemical evidence of an asthenosphere mantle contribution to the Cenozoic volcanic record of the region. Here we show that natural CO2 seeps along the Ntlakwe-Bongwan fault within KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, have C-He isotope systematics that support an origin from degassing mantle melts. Neon isotopes indicate that the melts originate from a deep mantle source that is similar to the mantle plume beneath Réunion, rather than the convecting upper mantle or sub-continental lithosphere. This confirms the existence of the Quathlamba mantle plume and importantly provides the first evidence in support of upwelling deep mantle beneath Southern Africa, helping to explain the regions elevation and abnormal heat flow.
DS202001-0007
2019
Doucet, L-S., Li, Z-X., Kirscher, U., El Dien, H.G.Coupled supercontinent -mantle plume events evidenced by oceanic plume record.Geology, Vol. 48, 5p. Mantleplumes, hotspots
DS202001-0010
2019
El Dien, H.G., Doucet, L.S., Li, Z-X.Global geochemical fingerprinting of plume intensity suggests coupling with the supercontinent cycle.Nature Communications, Vol 10, 1, doi.org/10.1038 /s41467-019-13300 8p. PdfMantleplumes, hotspots

Abstract: Plate tectonics and mantle plumes are two of the most fundamental solid-Earth processes that have operated through much of Earth history. For the past 300 million years, mantle plumes are known to derive mostly from two large low shear velocity provinces (LLSVPs) above the core-mantle boundary, referred to as the African and Pacific superplumes, but their possible connection with plate tectonics is debated. Here, we demonstrate that transition elements (Ni, Cr, and Fe/Mn) in basaltic rocks can be used to trace plume-related magmatism through Earth history. Our analysis indicates the presence of a direct relationship between the intensity of plume magmatism and the supercontinent cycle, suggesting a possible dynamic coupling between supercontinent and superplume events. In addition, our analysis shows a consistent sudden drop in MgO, Ni and Cr at ~3.2-3.0 billion years ago, possibly indicating an abrupt change in mantle temperature at the start of global plate tectonics.
DS202007-1146
2020
Heyn. B.H., Conrad, C.P., Tronnes, R.G.Core-mantle boundary topography and its relation to the viscosity structure of the lowermost mantle.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 543, 116358 14p. PdfMantlemantle plumes

Abstract: Two large areas of anomalously low seismic velocities are visible in all tomographic models of the lowermost mantle. Depending on the density structure of these Large Low Shear Velocity Provinces (LLSVPs), the core-mantle boundary (CMB) will deform upwards or downwards due to isostatic and dynamic topography, the latter being sensitive to the viscosity structure of the lowermost mantle. Heterogeneities in the viscosity structure, although difficult to constrain, might be especially important if the LLSVPs are thermochemical piles with elevated intrinsic viscosity as suggested by mineral physics. Based on numerical models, we identify a short-wavelength (about 80-120 km wide, up to a few km deep) topographic depression that forms around the pile edges if the pile is more viscous than the surrounding mantle. The depression forms when a wedge of thermal boundary layer material becomes compressed against the viscous pile, and is enhanced by relative uplift of the CMB beneath the pile by plumes rising above it. The depth and asymmetry of the depression constrain the magnitude of the viscosity contrast between pile and the surrounding mantle. Furthermore, (periodic) plume initiation and pile collapse at the pile margin systematically modify the characteristic depression, with a maximum in asymmetry and depth at the time of plume initiation. Core-reflected waves or scattered energy may be used to detect this topographic signature of stiff thermochemical piles at the base of the mantle.
DS202007-1147
2020
Hoggard, M.J., Parnell-Turner, R., White, N. Hotspots and mantle plumes revisited: towards reconciling the mantle heat transfer discrepancy.Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 542, 116317 16p. PdfMantleplumes, geothermometry

Abstract: Mantle convection is the principal mechanism by which heat is transferred from the deep Earth to the surface. Cold subducting slabs sink into the mantle and steadily warm, whilst upwelling plumes carry heat to the base of lithospheric plates where it can subsequently escape by conduction. Accurate estimation of the total heat carried by these plumes is important for understanding geodynamic processes and Earth's thermal budget. Existing estimates, based upon swell geometries and velocities of overriding plates, yield a global heat flux of ?2 TW and indicate that plumes play only a minor role in heat transfer. Here, we revisit the Icelandic and Hawaiian plumes to show that their individual flux estimates are likely to be incorrect due to the assumption that buoyancy is mainly produced within the lithosphere and therefore translates at plate velocities. We develop an alternative methodology that depends upon swell volume, is independent of plate velocities, and allows both for decay of buoyancy through time and for differential motion between asthenospheric buoyancy and the overlying plate. Reanalysis of the Icelandic and Hawaiian swells yields buoyancy fluxes of Mg s?1 and Mg s?1, respectively. Both swells are used to calibrate a buoyancy decay timescale of ?45 Myr for the new volumetric approach, which enables buoyancy fluxes to be estimated for a global inventory of 53 swells. Estimates from magmatic hotspots yield a cumulative lower bound on global plume flux of 2 TW, which increases to 6 TW if amagmatic swells are also included and if all buoyancy is assumed to be thermal in origin. Our results suggest that upwelling plumes play a significant role in the transfer of heat into the uppermost mantle.
DS202009-1668
2020
Tappe, S., Budde, G., Stracke, A., Wilson, A., Kleine, T.The tungsten-182 record of kimberlites above the African superplume: exploring links to the core-mantle boundary. Ultradeep diamondsEarth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 547, 14p. PdfAfricaLLSVP, superplume

Abstract: Many volcanic hotspots are connected via ‘plume’ conduits to thermochemical structures with anomalously low seismic velocities at the core-mantle boundary. Basaltic lavas from some of these hotspots show anomalous daughter isotope abundances for the short-lived 129I-129Xe, 146Sm-142Nd, and 182Hf-182W radioactive decay systems, suggesting that their lower mantle sources contain material that dates back to Earth-forming events during the first 100 million years in solar system history. Survival of such ‘primordial’ remnants in Earth's mantle places important constraints on the evolution and inner workings of terrestrial planets. Here we report high-precision 182W/184W measurements for a large suite of kimberlite volcanic rocks from across the African tectonic plate, which for the past 250 million years has drifted over the most prominent thermochemical seismic anomaly at the core-mantle boundary. This so-called African LLSVP, or ‘large low shear-wave velocity province’, is widely suspected to store early Earth remnants and is implicated as the ultimate source of global Phanerozoic kimberlite magmatism. Our results show, however, that kimberlites from above the African LLSVP, including localities with lower mantle diamonds such as Letseng and Karowe Orapa A/K6, lack anomalous 182W signatures, with an average W value of 0.0 ± 4.1 (2SD) for the 18 occurrences studied. If kimberlites are indeed sourced from the African LLSVP or superplume, then the extensive 182W evidence suggests that primordial or core-equilibrated mantle materials, which may contribute resolvable W excesses or deficits, are only minor or locally concentrated components in the lowermost mantle, for example in the much smaller ‘ultra-low velocity zones’ or ULVZs. However, the lack of anomalous 182W may simply suggest that low-volume kimberlite magmas are not derived from hot lower mantle plumes. In this alternative scenario, kimberlite magmas originate from volatile-fluxed ambient convecting upper mantle domains beneath relatively thick and cold lithosphere from where previously ‘stranded’ lower mantle and transition zone diamonds can be plucked.
DS202103-0368
2021
Bergman, S.C., Eldrett, J.S., Minisini, D.Phanerozoic Large Igneous Province, Petroleum system, and source rock links.American Geophysical Union and Wiley editors Ernst, R.E., Dickson, A.J., Bekker, A. Monograph 255, Chapter 9, 38p. Pdf doi:10.1002/ 9781119507444 open accessMantleplumes

Abstract: This chapter summarizes geochronologic and other data for major Phanerozoic Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs), Oceanic Anoxic Events (OAEs) and organic?rich petroleum source rocks. It also evaluates the models that support or refute genetic links between the three groups. The evidence appears to favor genetic links between the three groups, however, additional high precision age and geochemical data are needed to validate several events. Furthermore, the chapter provides insights into the importance of LIPs in hydrocarbon exploration.
DS202109-1479
2021
Litvin, Yu.A., Spivak, A.V., Kuzyura, A.V.Physicogeochemical evolution of melts of superplumes uplift from the lower mantle to the transition zone: experiment at 26 and 20 Gpa.Geochemistry International, Vol. 66, 7, pp. 607-629. pdfMantleplumes

Abstract: The Western Pacific Triangular Zone (WPTZ) is the frontier of a future supercontinent to be formed at 250 Ma after present. The WPTZ is characterized by double-sided subduction zones to the east and south, and is a region dominated by extensive refrigeration and water supply into the mantle wedge since at least 200 Ma. Long stagnant slabs extending over 1200 km are present in the mid-Mantle Boundary Layer (MBL, 410-660 km) under the WPTZ, whereas on the Core-Mantle Boundary (CMB, 2700-2900 km depth), there is a thick high-V anomaly, presumably representing a slab graveyard. To explain the D? layer cold anomaly, catastrophic collapse of once stagnant slabs in MBL is necessary, which could have occurred at 30-20 Ma, acting as a trigger to open a series of back-arc basins, hot regions, small ocean basins, and presumably formation of a series of microplates in both ocean and continent. These events were the result of replacement of upper mantle by hotter and more fertile materials from the lower mantle.
DS202202-0187
2022
Bao, X., Lithgow-Bertelloni, C.R., Jackson, M.G., Romanowicz, B.On the relative temperatures of Earth's volcanic hotspots and mid-ocean ridges. ** not specific to diamondsScience, Vol. 375, 6576, pp. 57-61.Mantleplumes

Abstract: Volcanic hotspots are thought to be fed by hot, active upwellings from the deep mantle, with excess temperatures (Tex) ~100° to 300°C higher than those of mid-ocean ridges. However, Tex estimates are limited in geographical coverage and often inconsistent for individual hotspots. We infer the temperature of oceanic hotspots and ridges simultaneously by converting seismic velocity to temperature. We show that while ~45% of plume-fed hotspots are hot (Tex ? 155°C), ~15% are cold (Tex ? 36°C) and ~40% are not hot enough to actively upwell (50°C ? Tex ? 136°C). Hot hotspots have an extremely high helium-3/helium-4 ratio and buoyancy flux, but cold hotspots do not. The latter may originate at upper mantle depths. Alternatively, the deep plumes that feed them may be entrained and cooled by small-scale convection.

 
 

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