
Tectonic, Magmatic, Hydrotherma, & Biological  Segmentation at Mid-Ocean Ridges (Geological Society Special Publication) By C.  J. Macleod
Publisher: Geological Society of London 1996-11-01 | 258 Pages | ISBN: 1897799721 | PDF | 6 MB
Publisher: Geological Society of London 1996-11-01 | 258 Pages | ISBN: 1897799721 | PDF | 6 MB
We now recognize that mid-ocean ridges  are not simple, two-dimensional features, but are instead partitioned into  morphologically distinct segments on a variety of scales. Variations in axial  morphology reflect differences in the structure of the magma reservoirs and in  the nature of mantle upwelling beneath the ridge. Segment ends may be starved of  magma, and spreading accommodated by tectonic stretching as well as by magmatic  accretion. The location of the magmatic heat source and the distribution of  permeability within the segment strongly control the geometry of seawater  circulation in the crust and locus of hydrothermal discharge. In turn, the  mechanisms of faunal colonization of vent sites and the evolutionary history of  vent organisms depend strongly upon the spatial distribution of black smoker  vents and the hydrodynamics of dispersal of the vent fluids. Segmentation,  therefore, plays a vital role in the inter-relationship between all tectonic,  magmatic, hydrothermal and biological processes at mid-ocean ridges. The recent  research presented in this book, much of it carried out under the aegis of the  British mid-ocean ridge 'BRIDGE' programme, examines this inter-relationship  with the aim of furthering our understanding of the causes and consequences  ofridge axial segmentation.
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