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 var...
Iceland sits astride a mid-ocean ridge underlain by a mantle hot spot. The interplay of these two ge...
It is almost universally assumed that Iceland is underlain by a hot plume rising from deep within th...
Several primary features of the Iceland region require a posteriori adaptions of the classical plume...
AbstractThe presence of a mantle plume beneath Iceland has long been hypothesised to explain its hig...
The presence of a mantle plume beneath Iceland has long been hypothesised to explain its high volume...
The presence of a mantle plume beneath Iceland has long been hypothesised to explain its high volume...
Iceland is the type example of a ridge-centered hotspot. It is controversial whether the seismic ano...
In spite of the fact that Iceland is frequently regarded as the archetypal example of mantle plumes,...
Publisher's version (útgefin grein)P‐to‐S conversions from the two primary discontinuities near 410 ...
Iceland, one of the most thoroughly investigated hotspots1,2,3, is generally accepted to be the mani...
Iceland and the encompassing Northeast Atlantic are characterized by abundant volcanism, anomalously...
Until recently, most of the lower mantle was generally considered to be well-mixed with strong heter...
The temperature of mantle plumes may vary on geologic time scales, from a few million years to tens...
Iceland has long been thought to be underlain by a thermal upwelling, or plume, rising from deep wit...
Iceland sits astride a mid-ocean ridge underlain by a {mantle} hotspot. The interplay of these two g...
Iceland sits astride a mid-ocean ridge underlain by a mantle hot spot. The interplay of these two ge...
It is almost universally assumed that Iceland is underlain by a hot plume rising from deep within th...
Several primary features of the Iceland region require a posteriori adaptions of the classical plume...
AbstractThe presence of a mantle plume beneath Iceland has long been hypothesised to explain its hig...
The presence of a mantle plume beneath Iceland has long been hypothesised to explain its high volume...
The presence of a mantle plume beneath Iceland has long been hypothesised to explain its high volume...
Iceland is the type example of a ridge-centered hotspot. It is controversial whether the seismic ano...
In spite of the fact that Iceland is frequently regarded as the archetypal example of mantle plumes,...
Publisher's version (útgefin grein)P‐to‐S conversions from the two primary discontinuities near 410 ...
Iceland, one of the most thoroughly investigated hotspots1,2,3, is generally accepted to be the mani...
Iceland and the encompassing Northeast Atlantic are characterized by abundant volcanism, anomalously...
Until recently, most of the lower mantle was generally considered to be well-mixed with strong heter...
The temperature of mantle plumes may vary on geologic time scales, from a few million years to tens...
Iceland has long been thought to be underlain by a thermal upwelling, or plume, rising from deep wit...
Iceland sits astride a mid-ocean ridge underlain by a {mantle} hotspot. The interplay of these two g...
Iceland sits astride a mid-ocean ridge underlain by a mantle hot spot. The interplay of these two ge...
It is almost universally assumed that Iceland is underlain by a hot plume rising from deep within th...
Several primary features of the Iceland region require a posteriori adaptions of the classical plume...