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Mid-Pacific Mountains

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Mid-Pacific Mountains is located in 100x100
Shatsky Rise
Hawaiian–Emperor seamount chain
Hess Rise
Mid-Pacific Mountains

The Mid-Pacific Mountains (MPM) is a large oceanic plateau located in the central North Pacific Ocean or south of the Hawaiian–Emperor seamount chain. Of volcanic origin and Mesozoic in age, it is located on the oldest part of the Pacific Plate and rises up to 2 km (1.2 mi) (Darwin Rise) above the surrounding ocean floor and is covered with several layers of thick sedimentary sequences that differ from those of other plateaux in the North Pacific.[1] About 50 seamounts are distributed over the MPM.[2] Some of the highest points in the range are above sea level which include Wake Island and Marcus Island.

The ocean floor of the MPM dates back to the Jurassic-Cretaceous, some of the oldest oceanic crust on Earth.[3]

The MPM is a range of guyots with a lava composition similar to those found in Iceland and the Galapagos Islands, and they probably formed similarly at or near a rift system.[4] In the Cretaceous, they formed large tropical islands located closer to the Equator that began to sink in the late Mesozoic.[5]

The MPM formed in the Early Cretaceous (at c. 110 Ma) over a hotspot that uplifted the ocean floor of the still young Pacific Plate. Reefs developed on the subsiding islands and renewed volcanism in the Late Cretaceous helped maintain some of eastern islands but inevitably the guyots sank to their present depth.[6] It has been proposed that the MPM has crossed over several hotspots, and the MPM guyots are indeed older on the western MPM than the eastern part, but the guyots do not form chains that can be traced to any known hotspots. The MPM, nevertheless, must have originated over the South Pacific Superswell. Among the guyots in the Mid-Pacific Mountains are Allison Guyot, Horizon Guyot, Resolution Guyot[7] and Darwin Guyot.[8]

The western half of the Easter hotspot chain, a lineament that includes the Line Islands and Tuamotu archipelago, begins near the eastern part of the MPM.[9] The formation of the MPM thus probably occurred at the Pacific-Farallon Ridge and the Easter hotspot, or where the Easter Microplate is now located.

Sources

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Citations

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  1. ^ Thiede et al. 1981, Morphology, Age, Plate-Tectonic Setting, and Previous Studies, pp. 1073–1074
  2. ^ Menard 1959, p. 206
  3. ^ Wilde 2010, Abstract
  4. ^ Kroenke, Kellogg & Nemoto 1985, Abstract
  5. ^ Thiede et al. 1981, Abstract
  6. ^ Winterer & Metzler 1984, Abstract
  7. ^ Winterer et al. 1995, Origin and Formation of Igneous Basement, pp. 508–509
  8. ^ Ladd, H.S.; Newman, W.A.; Sohl, N.F. (1974). Cameron, A.M.; Cambell, B.M.; Cribb, A.B.; Endean, R.; Jell, J.S.; Jones, O.A.; Mather, P.; Talbot, F.H. (eds.). Darwin guyot, the Pacific's oldest atoll (PDF). Second International Coral Reef Symposium. Vol. 2. Brisbane, Australia: The Great Barrier Reef Committee. p. 513.
  9. ^ Clouard & Bonneville 2001, Easter, p. 696

General and cited sources

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