A colorful bathymetric image of the seafloor, in which the points at highest elevation are red and the points at lowest elevation are dark blue.
Multibeam bathymetry shows the morphology of a section of the Southeast Indian Ridge south of Australia. New research finds that highly variable seafloor morphology is controlled by changes in magma supply along the axes of mid-ocean ridges. Credit: Ross Parnell-Turner
Source: Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth

translation of this article was made by Wiley. 本文由Wiley提供翻译稿

At nearly 65,000 kilometers long, the mid-ocean ridge system is the longest mountain range in the world. Running beneath the ocean’s surface, mid-ocean ridges are formed at divergent plate boundaries, where tectonic plates stretch apart and magma rises to create new crust on the ocean’s floor. The rift along the axis of the mid-ocean ridge system is among the most seismically active locations on Earth.

Through the use of multibeam bathymetry, a type of detailed sonar mapping that measures seafloor depth, researchers have cataloged a wide range of geologic formations on the flanks of these mid-ocean ridges, such as volcanic cones, seamounts, and abyssal hills—ridges up to hundreds of meters high and tens of kilometers long that range from linear to highly irregular. Previous research suggested the rate at which crust spreads apart could be the cause of this varied topography.

Tucholke et al. studied the flanks of mid-ocean ridges using multibeam bathymetric data to better understand how magma supply may have led to this variety of geologic formations. Their findings indicated that changes in magma supply influence seafloor shapes on the flanks of mid-ocean ridges more strongly than spreading rate.

The researchers examined the differences in gravity at 122 data sites on mid-ocean ridges around the globe, as well as the rate at which the ridges were spreading apart, to infer magma supply below the ocean floor. They noted that some patterns, including underwater abyssal hills that are longer, straighter, and connected, are correlated with higher magma supply. Steeper, rougher, more irregular abyssal hills are formed when magma supply is reduced. In parts of the Southwest Indian Ridge, located along the floor of the southwest Indian Ocean, exposed mantle is likely altered and weakened by interaction with seawater, which can prevent steep underwater hills from forming despite limited supplies of magma.

The methods used in this study, a comparison of visual and quantitative findings using bathymetric data, can help other researchers investigate the structure of ocean floor landscapes even further. (Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, https://doi.org/10.1029/2023JB027367, 2023)

—Rebecca Owen (@beccapox), Science Writer

Citation: Owen, R. (2023), Seafloor shapes on the flanks of mid-ocean ridges linked to magma supply, Eos, 104, https://doi.org/10.1029/2023EO230462. Published on 5 December 2023.
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