The upper oceanic crust is produced by magmatism at mid-ocean ridges, a process thought to be characterized by cyclic bouts of intense magmatic activity, separated by periods when faulting accommodates most or even all of the plate motion. It is not known whether there is a distinct periodicity to such magmatic–tectonic cycles. Here we present high-resolution sidescan sonar data from the neovolcanic zone of the North Kolbeinsey Ridge, a shallow slow-spreading ridge where high glacial and steady post-glacial sedimentation rates allow relative flow ages to be determined with a resolution of around 2 kyr using backscatter amplitude as a proxy for sediment thickness and hence age. We identify 18 lava flow fields covering 40% of the area surveye...
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2016. This article is posted here by permission of Am...
At mid-ocean ridges volcanism generally decreases with spreading rate but surprisingly massive volca...
The spreading rate of the Mid Atlantic Ridge, at the area around 45°N is 11mm/y. This is appropriate...
The upper oceanic crust is produced by magmatism at mid-ocean ridges, a process thought to be charac...
AbstractThe upper oceanic crust is produced by magmatism at mid-ocean ridges, a process thought to b...
Side-scan sonar, submersible observations and sampling of lava flows from the East Pacific Rise, 17_...
Side-scan sonar, submersible observations and sampling of lava flows from the East Pacific Rise, 17_...
We present geological observations and geochemical data for the youngest volcanic features on the sl...
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2005. This article is posted here by permission of ...
Combined analyses of volcanic features in DSL-120 sonar data and Argo I images along the ridge crest...
Combined analyses of volcanic features in DSL-120 sonar data and Argo I images along the ridge crest...
The process of plate accretion at mid-ocean ridges, once thought to occur in a relatively simple, ma...
We analyse TOBI side-scan sonar images collected during Charles Darwin cruise CD76 in the axial vall...
Seafloor spreading is accommodated by volcanic and tectonic processes along the global mid-ocean rid...
We analyse TOBI side-scan sonar images collected during Charles Darwin cruise CD76 in the axial vall...
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2016. This article is posted here by permission of Am...
At mid-ocean ridges volcanism generally decreases with spreading rate but surprisingly massive volca...
The spreading rate of the Mid Atlantic Ridge, at the area around 45°N is 11mm/y. This is appropriate...
The upper oceanic crust is produced by magmatism at mid-ocean ridges, a process thought to be charac...
AbstractThe upper oceanic crust is produced by magmatism at mid-ocean ridges, a process thought to b...
Side-scan sonar, submersible observations and sampling of lava flows from the East Pacific Rise, 17_...
Side-scan sonar, submersible observations and sampling of lava flows from the East Pacific Rise, 17_...
We present geological observations and geochemical data for the youngest volcanic features on the sl...
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2005. This article is posted here by permission of ...
Combined analyses of volcanic features in DSL-120 sonar data and Argo I images along the ridge crest...
Combined analyses of volcanic features in DSL-120 sonar data and Argo I images along the ridge crest...
The process of plate accretion at mid-ocean ridges, once thought to occur in a relatively simple, ma...
We analyse TOBI side-scan sonar images collected during Charles Darwin cruise CD76 in the axial vall...
Seafloor spreading is accommodated by volcanic and tectonic processes along the global mid-ocean rid...
We analyse TOBI side-scan sonar images collected during Charles Darwin cruise CD76 in the axial vall...
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2016. This article is posted here by permission of Am...
At mid-ocean ridges volcanism generally decreases with spreading rate but surprisingly massive volca...
The spreading rate of the Mid Atlantic Ridge, at the area around 45°N is 11mm/y. This is appropriate...