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JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH,
VOL. 100, NO. B6,
PAGES 10,077–10,094,
1995
Origin of thick, high-velocity igneous crust along the U.S. East Coast Margin
Peter B. Kelemen
Department of Geology and Geophysics, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, Massachusetts
W. Steven Holbrook
Department of Geology and Geophysics, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, Massachusetts
Abstract
Recent seismic results on the U.S. East Coast continental margin show that the zone between rifted continental and normal
oceanic crust consists of thick (up to 25 km), high seismic velocity (v p of 7.2–7.3 km s−1) crust, interpreted as mafic igneous rocks emplaced during Triassic/Jurassic continental rifting. The total volume of igneous
rocks in this zone, which we call the East Coast Margin Igneous Province (ECMIP), may be as much as 2.7 × 106 km3, placing the ECMIP among the world's large igneous provinces. We constrain the composition and origin of the thick, igneous
crust by using a compilation of laboratory measurements to predict P wave velocities for rocks with the compositions of liquids
produced by partial melting of mantle rocks. The high-velocity crust was produced from partial melting of mantle peridotite,
with smaller melt fractions (< 10%) but at higher average pressures (≥ 2.0 GPa) than beneath normal mid-ocean ridges. This
requires higher than normal asthenospheric potential temperatures during rifting and a lid of lithosphere above upwelling
asthenosphere to limit the minimum pressure of melting. Production of thick igneous crust at small melt fractions requires
that the vertical flux of asthenosphere during rifting exceeded the lateral flux of lithosphere due to extension; that is,
mantle “upwelling” was more rapid than lithospheric “spreading.” Thick igneous crust is strongly asymmetrical, extending up
to 2000 km along the margin but only for about 80–100 km seaward. The rapid seaward transition to oceanic crust with normal
thickness and seismic velocity implies that the thermal anomaly and relatively rapid upwelling lasted for only 5–8 m.y. Moreover,
there is no crustal thickness anomaly in the Central Atlantic, in contrast to the North Atlantic where the influence of the
Iceland plume created thick crust in a belt spanning the ocean from Greenland to the Faeroes Islands. These factors seem to
preclude formation of thick igneous crust in response to a deep-seated mantle plume. The ECMIP may have formed when high upper
mantle temperatures induced asthenospheric upwelling. Magmatism and seafloor spreading dissipated the thermal anomaly in the
upper mantle, after which normal oceanic crust formed along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge.
Received 26
August
1994;
accepted 16
March
1995.
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Citation: Kelemen, P. B., and W. S. Holbrook
(1995),
Origin of thick, high-velocity igneous crust along the U.S. East Coast Margin,
J. Geophys. Res.,
100(B6),
10,077–10,094.
Copyright 1995 by the American Geophysical Union.
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