International Ocean Discovery Program Expedition 397T sought to address the shortage of drilling time caused by COVID-19 mitigation during Expedition 391 (Walvis Ridge Hotspot) by drilling at two sites omitted from the earlier cruise. A week of coring time was added to a transit of JOIDES Resolution from Cape Town to Lisbon, which would cross Walvis Ridge on its way north. These two sites were located on two of the three seamount trails that emerge from the split in Walvis Ridge morphology into several seamount chains at 2°E. Site U1584 (proposed Site GT-6A) sampled the Gough track on the east, and Site U1585 (proposed Site TT-4A) sampled the Tristan track on the west. Together with Site U1578, drilled on the Center track during Expedition 391, they form a transect across the northern Walvis Ridge Guyot Province. The goal was to core seamount basalts and associated volcanic material for geochemical and isotopic, geochronologic, paleomagnetic, and volcanologic study. Scientifically, one emphasis was to better understand the split in geochemical and isotopic signatures that occurs at the morphologic split. Geochronology would add to the established age progression but also give another dimension to understanding Walvis Ridge seamount formation by giving multiple ages atmore »
Expedition 391 Preliminary Report: Walvis Ridge Hotspot
Hotspot tracks (quasilinear chains of seamounts, ridges, and other volcanic structures) provide important records of plate motions, as well as mantle geodynamics, magma flux, and mantle source compositions. The Tristan-Gough-Walvis Ridge (TGW) hotspot track, extending from the active volcanic islands of Tristan da Cunha and Gough through a province of guyots and then along Walvis Ridge to the Etendeka flood basalt province, forms one of the most prominent and complex global hotspot tracks. The TGW hotspot track displays a tight linear age progression in which ages increase from the islands to the flood basalts (covering ~135 My). Unlike Pacific tracks, which are simple chains of seamounts that are often compared to chains of pearls, the TGW track is alternately a steep-sided narrow ridge, an oceanic plateau, subparallel linear ridges and chains of seamounts, and areas of what appear to be randomly dispersed seamounts. The track displays isotopic zonation over the last ~70 My. The zonation appears near the middle of the track just before it splits into two to three chains of ridge- and guyot-type seamounts. The older ridge is also overprinted with age-progressive late-stage volcanism, which was emplaced ~30–40 My after the initial eruptions and has a distinct isotopic more »
- Award ID(s):
- 1326927
- Publication Date:
- NSF-PAR ID:
- 10324842
- Journal Name:
- Preliminary report
- Volume:
- 391
- ISSN:
- 2372-9562
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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Walvis Ridge (WR) is a long-lived hotspot track that began with a continental flood basalt event at ~132 Ma during the initial opening of the South Atlantic Ocean. WR stretches ~3300 km to the active volcanic islands of Tristan da Cunha and Gough, and it was originally paired with Rio Grande Rise (RGR) oceanic plateau. Because of the duration of its volcanism and the length of its track, the Tristan-Gough hotspot forms the most pronounced bathymetric anomaly of all Atlantic hotspots. Its age progression, chemistry, and connection to flood basalts point to a lower mantle plume source, projected to be the hypothesized plume generation zone at the margin of the African large low shear-wave velocity province. The hotspot interacted with the Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR) during its early history, producing WR and RGR through plume-ridge interaction. Valdivia Bank, a WR plateau paired with the main part of RGR, represents heightened hotspot output and may have formed with RGR around a microplate, disrupting the expected hotspot age progression. After producing a relatively uniform composition from ~120 to ~70 Ma, WR split into three seamount chains with distinct isotopic compositions at about the time that the plume and MAR separated. With ~70 Mymore »
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During International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Expedition 391, the Tristan-Gough-Walvis Ridge (TGW) hotspot track was cored in December 2021–February 2022. Its overarching objective was to recover basaltic rock from TGW edifices to understand the evolution of Walvis Ridge and related guyots. Significant cuts to the Expedition 391 operational plan were necessary as a result of lost time due to COVID-19 mitigation procedures. Because the R/V JOIDES Resolution will pass over Walvis Ridge during the transit from Cape Town, South Africa, to Lisbon, Portugal, prior to IODP Expedition 397, the 3 week transit provides an opportunity to drill one or two holes that were planned but not cored during Expedition 391. The transit schedule indicates that ~7 days of ship time will be available for this effort. Coring will be attempted at one or two sites, depending on weather and operational difficulties. The first site to be cored will be proposed Site GT-6A on the flank of the Gough track ridge. If time permits, coring will also be done at proposed Site TT-3A on the Tristan track, completing the proposed transect across the three chains of the Walvis Ridge guyot province. Two operational strategies are planned to address the limited timemore »
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