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Staudigel & Schmincke 1984
Staudigel, H. and Schmincke, H. (1984). The Pliocene seamount seep of La Palma/Canary Island. Journal of Geophysical Research 89: doi: 10.1029/JB080i013p11195. issn: 0148-0227.
A Pliocene submarine seep of alkali basaltic pillow lavas, hyaloclastites, and breccias (A), a sheeted dike swarm (B), and a basal suite of gabbro and ultramafic rocks (C) from La Palma (Canary Islands) is interpreted as a cross section through an uplifted seamount. This series has been tilted to its present orientation of 50¿/230¿ (plunge and azimuth), probably by upwarping due to intrusions in the central portion of the island. The basal plutonic complex (C) also includes intrusives coeval with up to 2000m of younger subaerial alkali basaltic lavas unconformably overlying the submarine series. The plutonic suite (C) is overlain abruptly by more than 1800m of sills (B), 0.4--1m thick on average, with minor screens of lavas and breccias. Extrusives (A) form a 1750m thick sequence of pillow lavas, breccias, and hyaloclastites. The clastic rocks increase in abundance upward and are of four main types: (1) breccias, consisting of partly broken pillows, formed nearly in situ, (2) heterolithologic pillow fragment breccias, (3) hyaloclastites composed dominantly of high vesicular lapilli and ash sized shards, the latter thought to have formed by near surface explosive eruptions and been subsequently transported downslope by mass flows, (2) and (3) being interpreted to have been resedimented, and (4) pillow scoria breccias from the upper 700m of the extrusive section consisting of amoeboidal, highly vesicular ''pillows'' and lava stringers and local bombs probably formed by cracking and ''bleeding'' of gas-rich expanding pillow lava and some shallow submarine/subaerial lava fountaining. The extrusive series is chemically and mineralogically crudely zoned, with the most differentiated rocks (metatrachytes and mugearites) at the base and most picritic lavas occurring near the top of the series. Subsequent to emplacement, the entire extrusive and intrusive series has been hydrothermally altered, the lower part of greenschist and the upper part to smectite-zeolite facies mineral assemblages. The La Palma succession, combined with evidence from surface studies of seamounts, suggests that seamounts are formed by intrusive and extrusive processes in approximately equal portions. The nature of eruptive clastic and depositional mechanisms changes drastically during growth of a seamount if the critical depth for major magmati degassing is surpassed and especially if magmatic explosive processes can occur at very shallow water depth, the critical depth depending on magma and thus volatile composition. Changes in slopes of a seamount influence depositional processes. Based on these factors, at least three major depositional sites develop as a seamount grows: summit, flank, and apron facies. Nonexplosive, extrusive processes prevail in the Deep Water Stage, dominantly producing pillow lavas (75%). These consist of individual pillow A Pliocene submarine seep of alkalibasaltic pillow lavas, hyaloclastites, and breccias (A), a sheeted dike swarm (B), and a basal suite of gabbro and ultramafic rocks (C) from La Palma (Canary Islands) is interpreted as a cross section through an uplifted seamount. This series has been tilted to its present orientation of 50¿/230¿ (plunge and azimuth), probably by upwarping due to intrusions in the central portion of the island. The basal plutonic complex (C) also includes intrusives coeval with up to 2000m of younger subaerial alkali basaltic lavas unconformably overlying the submarine series. The plutonic suite (C) is overlain abruptly by more than 1800m of sills (B), 0.4--1m thick on average, with minor screens of lavas and breccias. Extrusives (A) form a 1750m thick sequence of pillow lavas, breccias, and hyaloclastites. The clastic rocks increase in abundance upward and are of four main types: (1) breccias, consisting of partly broken pillows, formed nearly in situ, (2) heterolithologic pillow fragment breccias, (3) hyaloclastites composed dominantly of high vesicular lapilli and ash sized shards, the latter thought to have formed by near surface explosive eruptions and been subsequently transported downslope by mass flows, (2) and (3) being interpreted to have been resedimented, and (4) pillow scoria breccias from the upper 700m of the extrusive section consisting of amoeboidal, highly vesicular ''pillows'' and lava stringers and local bombs probably formed by cracking and ''bleeding'' of gas-rich expanding pillow lava and some shallow submarine/subaerial lava fountaining. The extrusive series is chemically and mineralogically crudely zoned, with the most differentiated rocks (metatrachytes and mugearites) at the base and most picritic lavas occurring near the top of the series. Subsequent to emplacement, the entire extrusive and intrusive series has been hydrothermally altered, the lower part of greenschist and the upper part to smectite-zeolite facies mineral assemblages. The La Palma succession, combined with evidence from surface studies of seamounts, suggests that seamounts are formed by intrusive and extrusive processes in approximately equal portions. The nature of eruptive clastic and depositional mechanisms changes drastically during growth of a seamount if the critical depth for major magmati degassing is surpassed and especially if magmatic explosive processes can occur at very shallow water depth, the critical depth depending on magma and thus volatile composition. Changes in slopes of a seamount influence depositional processes. Based on these factors, at least three major depositional sites develop as a seamount grows: summit, flank, and apron facies. Nonexplosive, extrusive processes prevail in the Deep Water Stage, dominantly producing pillow lavas (75%). These consist of individual pillow
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Journal of Geophysical Research
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