Matching satellite-derived gravity signatures and seismicity patterns along mid-ocean ridges

A world‐wide correlation between satellite‐derived gravity signatures and the relative abundance of teledetected earthquakes over mid‐ocean ridges has yielded some unexpected results. Rift valley disappearances along slow‐spreading centres and attendant excess volcanism coincide with seismicity gaps...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inTerra nova (Oxford, England) Vol. 10; no. 4; pp. 177 - 182
Main Authors De Alteriis, G., Gilg-Capar, L., Olivet, J.L.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK Blackwell Science Ltd 01.07.1998
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Summary:A world‐wide correlation between satellite‐derived gravity signatures and the relative abundance of teledetected earthquakes over mid‐ocean ridges has yielded some unexpected results. Rift valley disappearances along slow‐spreading centres and attendant excess volcanism coincide with seismicity gaps, at times related to nearby hotspots, whereas earthquake clusters along virtually aseismic, faster‐spreading centres systematically indicate the presence of active propagating ridge tips. Therefore, at the world scale of investigation, seismicity fairly well predicts ridge morphology and 2nd order axial discontinuities. The occurrence of a certain degree of seismicity along the ‘ductile’ Reykjanes ridge south of the Iceland hotspot is tentatively explained in terms of prevailing shear stresses due to oblique spreading which accumulate on the available brittle volume on the flanks of the ridge rather than on its crest.
Bibliography:ark:/67375/WNG-H4KF0BWM-3
istex:BB296F3A5DAB74BAAC782934FB39CC896A38593A
ArticleID:TER190
ISSN:0954-4879
1365-3121
DOI:10.1046/j.1365-3121.1998.00190.x