The recent history of the Galapagos Triple Junction preserved on the Pacific plate
The recent history of the Galapagos Triple Junction preserved on the Pacific plate
Date
2013-04
Authors
Smith, Deborah K.
Schouten, Hans A.
Montesi, Laurent G. J.
Zhu, Wenlu
Schouten, Hans A.
Montesi, Laurent G. J.
Zhu, Wenlu
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Keywords
Galapagos triple junction
Galapagos microplate
Crack interaction model
Hotspot
Galapagos microplate
Crack interaction model
Hotspot
Abstract
At the Galapagos triple junction, the Cocos and Nazca plates are broken by a succession of
transient rifts north and south of the Cocos-Nazca (C-N) Rift. Modeling has suggested that each
rift initiated at the East Pacific Rise (EPR), its location controlled by the distance of the C-N Rift
tip from the EPR. Evidence on the Pacific plate confirms that each transient rift formed a true
RRR triple junction with the EPR and clarifies the history of the region. At ~1.5 Ma the triple
junctions began jumping rapidly toward C-N Rift suggesting that the C-N Rift tip moved closer
to the EPR. Pacific abyssal hills became broad and shallow indicating enhanced magma supply
to the region. At ~1.4 Ma, the Galapagos microplate developed when extension became fixed on
the southern transient rift to form the South scarp of the future Dietz rift basin. Lavas flooded the
area and a Galapagos-Nazca magmatic spreading center initiated at the EPR. We suggest that a
hotspot was approaching the southern triple junction from the west. The hotspot crossed to the
Nazca plate ~1.25 Ma. Dietz seamount formed within the young spreading center, dikes intruded
Dietz rift basin, and eruptions built volcanic ridges. Since ~0.8 Ma magmatic spreading has
jumped northward twice, most recently to Dietz volcanic ridge. Amagmatic extension to the east
has formed the large North scarp of Dietz rift basin. Northward jumping of the southern triple
junction has maintained the microplate boundary close to the proposed hotspot.
Description
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2013. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier B.V. for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Earth and Planetary Science Letters 371-372 (2013): 6-15, doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2013.04.018.