AbstractEighty per cent of all mid-ocean spreading centres are slow. Using a mixture of global bathymetry data and ship-board multibeam echosounder data, we explore the morphology of global mid-ocean ridges and compare two slow spreading analogues: the Carlsberg Ridge in the north-west Indian Ocean between 57°E and 60°E, and the Kane to Atlantis super-segment of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge between 21°N and 31°N. At a global scale, mid-ocean spreading centres show an inverse correlation between segment length and spreading rate with segmentation frequency. Within this context, both the Mid-Atlantic Ridge super-segment and Carlsberg Ridge are similar: spreading at 22 and 26mm/yr full rates respectively, being devoid of major transform faults, and ...
The creation of new ocean lithosphere at mid-ocean ridges is accompanied by characteristic earthquak...
International audienceThe Mohns Ridge, in the Norwegian Greenland Sea, is one of the slowest spreadi...
Magmatic accretion and tectonic extension have been recognised as the driving forces that forms the ...
Eighty per cent of all mid-ocean spreading centres are slow. Using a mixture of global bathymetry da...
AbstractEighty per cent of all mid-ocean spreading centres are slow. Using a mixture of global bathy...
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2007. This article is posted here by permission of Am...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Joint Program in Oceanography (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Eart...
Of the global mid-ocean ridge system, ultraslow spreading ridges represent a different class of spre...
International audienceWe present three-dimensional numerical models of convection within the partial...
The Mid-Atlantic Ridge between the Kane and Atlantis fracture zones (24'N-3O0N) is a slow-spreading ...
The Southeast Indian Ridge (SEIR) spreads at a relatively narrow range of intermediate rates (59–75 ...
Gakkel Ridge, the active spreading center in the Arctic Ocean, is the slowest spreading portion of t...
Mid-ocean rift systems opening at full spreading rates < 20 mm/y differ in their structure from all ...
The process of plate accretion at mid-ocean ridges, once thought to occur in a relatively simple, ma...
Author Posting. © The Oceanography Society, 2012. This article is posted here by permission of The ...
The creation of new ocean lithosphere at mid-ocean ridges is accompanied by characteristic earthquak...
International audienceThe Mohns Ridge, in the Norwegian Greenland Sea, is one of the slowest spreadi...
Magmatic accretion and tectonic extension have been recognised as the driving forces that forms the ...
Eighty per cent of all mid-ocean spreading centres are slow. Using a mixture of global bathymetry da...
AbstractEighty per cent of all mid-ocean spreading centres are slow. Using a mixture of global bathy...
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2007. This article is posted here by permission of Am...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Joint Program in Oceanography (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Eart...
Of the global mid-ocean ridge system, ultraslow spreading ridges represent a different class of spre...
International audienceWe present three-dimensional numerical models of convection within the partial...
The Mid-Atlantic Ridge between the Kane and Atlantis fracture zones (24'N-3O0N) is a slow-spreading ...
The Southeast Indian Ridge (SEIR) spreads at a relatively narrow range of intermediate rates (59–75 ...
Gakkel Ridge, the active spreading center in the Arctic Ocean, is the slowest spreading portion of t...
Mid-ocean rift systems opening at full spreading rates < 20 mm/y differ in their structure from all ...
The process of plate accretion at mid-ocean ridges, once thought to occur in a relatively simple, ma...
Author Posting. © The Oceanography Society, 2012. This article is posted here by permission of The ...
The creation of new ocean lithosphere at mid-ocean ridges is accompanied by characteristic earthquak...
International audienceThe Mohns Ridge, in the Norwegian Greenland Sea, is one of the slowest spreadi...
Magmatic accretion and tectonic extension have been recognised as the driving forces that forms the ...