Hotspot volcanism close to a passive continental margin: the Canary Islands
The Canarian Archipelago is a group of volcanic islands on a slow-moving oceanic plate, close to a continental margin. The origins of the archipelago are controversial: a hotspot or mantle plume, a zone of lithospheric deformation, a region of compressional block-faulting or a rupture propagating we...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Geological magazine 1998-09, Vol.135 (5), p.591-604 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The Canarian Archipelago is a group of volcanic islands on a slow-moving
oceanic plate,
close to a continental margin. The origins of the archipelago are controversial:
a hotspot or mantle
plume, a zone of lithospheric deformation, a region of compressional block-faulting
or a rupture
propagating westwards from the active Atlas Mountains fold belt have been
proposed by different
authors. However, comparison of the Canarian Archipelago with the prototypical
hotspot-related
island group, the Hawaiian Archipelago, reveals that the differences between
the two are not as great
as had previously been supposed on the basis of older data. Quaternary
igneous activity in the
Canaries is concentrated at the western end of the archipelago, close to
the present-day location of the
inferred hotspot. This is the same relationship as seen in the Hawaiian
and Cape Verde islands. The latter
archipelago, associated with a well-defined but slow-moving mantle plume,
shows anomalies in a
plot of island age against distance which are comparable to those seen
in the Canary Islands: these
anomalies cannot therefore be used to argue against a hotspot origin for
the Canaries. Individual
islands in both archipelagoes are characterized by initial rapid growth
(the ‘shield-building’ stages of
activity), followed by a period of quiescence and deep erosion (erosion
gap) which in turn is followed
by a ‘post-erosional’ stage of activity. The absence of post-shield
stage subsidence in the Canaries is in
marked contrast with the major subsidence experienced by the Hawaiian Islands,
but is comparable
with the lack of subsidence evident in other island groups at slow-moving
hotspots, such as the Cape
Verdes. Comparison of the structure and structural evolution of the Canary
Islands with other
oceanic islands such as Hawaii and Réunion reveals many similarities.
These include the development
of triple (‘Mercedes Star’) rift zones and the occurrence of
giant lateral collapses on the flanks of these
rift zones. The apparent absence of these features in the post-erosional
islands may in part be a result
of their greater age and deeper erosion, which has removed much of the
evidence for their early volcanic
architecture. We conclude that the many similarities between the Canary
Islands and island
groups whose hotspot origins are undisputed show that the Canaries have
been produced in the same
way. |
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ISSN: | 0016-7568 1469-5081 |
DOI: | 10.1017/S0016756898001447 |