South Kermadec Ridge Seamounts
Appearance
(Redirected from Draft:South Kermadec Ridge Seamounts)
South Kermadec Ridge Seamounts | |
---|---|
Location | |
Location | South Pacific Ocean |
Coordinates | 35°30′S 178°12′E / 35.5°S 178.2°E |
Geology | |
Type | Seamount chain |
The South Kermadec Ridge Seamounts are a continuation of the volcanic island arc,[1] formed at the convergent boundary where the Pacific Plate subducts under the Indo-Australian Plate. The subducting Pacific Plate created the Kermadec Trench,[2] the second deepest submarine trench,[3] to the east of the islands. The seamounts lie along the western aspect of the undersea Kermadec Ridge, which runs southwest from the Kermadec Islands towards the North Island of New Zealand and northeast towards Tonga (Kermadec-Tonga Arc).
This area of the Kermadec Arc - Havre Trough is a relatively young oceanic arc-back-arc system as it became active in the Quaternary.[4] The seamounts include:[5][4][6][7]
- Speight Knoll −1,840 metres (−6,037 ft)32°23′18″S 179°35′28″E / 32.3883°S 179.591°E[7]
- Oliver Knoll −2,200 metres (−7,218 ft)32°23′40″S 179°40′20″E / 32.39448°S 179.67231°E[7]
- Haungaroa Seamount −660 metres (−2,165 ft)32°36′55″S 179°37′18″E / 32.6152°S 179.6217°E[7]
- Kuiwai Seamount −560 metres (−1,837 ft)33°09′32″S 179°57′23″E / 33.159°S 179.9565°E[7]
- Cole Seamount 33°24′34″S 179°52′17″E / 33.4095°S 179.8715°E[7]
- Ngātoroirangi Seamount −340 metres (−1,115 ft)33°44′07″S 179°47′48″E / 33.73533°S 179.79666°E[7]
- Sonne Seamount 34°04′00″S 179°35′00″E / 34.066667°S 179.583333°E[7]
- Kibblewhite Seamount −990 metres (−3,248 ft)34°34′34″S 179°15′43″E / 34.5762°S 179.262°E[7]
- Gill Seamount −1,200 metres (−3,937 ft) 34°37′12″S 178°22′30″E / 34.62°S 178.375°E
- Situated in the middle of a deep basin (3000m deep) in the Havre Trough, to the west of Kibblewhite and actually closer to the Lau-Colville Ridge than the Kermadec Ridge[4]
- Basalt age 1.1 ± 0.4 Ma[8]
- Yokosuka Seamount −1,060 metres (−3,478 ft) 34°42′S 178°34′E / 34.7°S 178.57°E
- To west of Brothers situated on an elevated basal plateau (2500m deep)[4]
- Rapuhia Seamount −650 metres (−2,133 ft) 34°46′S 178°30′E / 34.77°S 178.5°E
- To west of Brothers[4]
- Gilianes Seamount −700 metres (−2,297 ft) 34°46′S 178°35′E / 34.77°S 178.58°E
- To west of Brothers[4]
- Brothers Seamount −1,350 metres (−4,429 ft) 34°52′30″S 179°04′30″E / 34.875°S 179.075°E [6]
- Healy −1,150 metres (−3,773 ft) 35°00′S 178°54′E / 35.0°S 178.9°E [6]
- Two calderas in a 15 kilometres (9 mi) elongated complex with the largest caldera being 3 x 4 km
- This is believed to have been formed in the 1360 ± 75 CE eruption
- Cotton −980 metres (−3,215 ft) 35°00′14″S 178°58′23″E / 35.004°S 178.973°E [6]
- Satellitic cone to Healy at south west end of complex
- Two calderas in a 15 kilometres (9 mi) elongated complex with the largest caldera being 3 x 4 km
- The Silents
- Silent I Seamount[9]
- Silent II Seamount −850 metres (−2,789 ft) 35°09′36″S 178°52′05″E / 35.15991°S 178.86805°E[7][9]
- The Rumbles
- Rumble I Seamount −1,100 metres (−3,609 ft) 35°30′S 178°54′E / 35.5°S 178.9°E [6]
- Rumble II West Seamount −1,200 metres (−3,937 ft) 35°21′11″S 178°31′37″E / 35.353°S 178.527°E [6]
- Rumble II East Seamount −850 metres (−2,789 ft) 35°25′45″S 178°39′17″E / 35.42916°S 178.65475°E[7]
- Rumble III Seamount −140 metres (−459 ft) 35°44′42″S 178°28′41″E / 35.745°S 178.478°E [6]
- Largest of the chain of Rumble seamounts
- Eruptions on:[10]
- 9 July 1958
- 16 January 1963
- 15 October 1973
- 15 June 1986
- 2 July 2008
- Rumble IV Seamount −450 metres (−1,476 ft)36°08′S 178°03′E / 36.13°S 178.05°E [6]
- Rumble V Seamount −1,100 metres (−3,609 ft)36°08′20″S 178°11′49″E / 36.139°S 178.197°E [6]
- Lillie Seamount −1,280 metres (−4,199 ft)35°52′10″S 178°26′08″E / 35.86956°S 178.43546°E[7]
- Lillie is north of Rumbles IV and V
- Tangaroa Seamount −600 metres (−1,969 ft) 36°19′16″S 178°01′41″E / 36.321°S 178.028°E [6]
- Clark Seamount −860 metres (−2,822 ft) 36°26′46″S 177°50′20″E / 36.446°S 177.839°E [6]
- Whakatāne Seamount −900 metres (−2,953 ft) 36°46′58″S 177°27′43″E / 36.78282°S 177.46181°E[7][4]
References
[edit]- ^ Wright, I. C. (1994). "Nature and tectonic setting of the southern Kermadec submarine arc volcanoes: An overview". Marine Geology. 118 (3–4): 217–236. doi:10.1016/0025-3227(94)90085-X. Retrieved 5 June 2022.
- ^ Billen, M. I.; Gurnis, M. (2005). "Constraints on subducting plate strength within the Kermadec trench". Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth. 110 (B5). Bibcode:2005JGRB..110.5407B. doi:10.1029/2004JB003308.
- ^ "Deep-Sea Vehicle Nereus Lost 6 Miles Down". National Geographic. Archived from the original on 5 June 2022. Retrieved 5 June 2022.
- ^ a b c d e f g Zohrab, Alexander (2016). "The Petrology, Geochemistry and Geochronology of Back-Arc Stratovolcanoes in the Southern Kermadec Arc-Havre Trough, SW Pacific".
- ^ Ballance, Peter F.; Ablaev, Albert G.; Pushchin, Igor K; Pletnev, Sergei P.; Birylina, Maria G.; Itaya, Tetsumaru; Follas, Harry A.; Gibson, Graham W. (1999). "Morphology and history of the Kermadec trench–arc–backarc basin–remnant arc system at 30 to 328S: geophysical profile, microfossil and K–Ar data" (PDF). Marine Geology. 159 (1–4): 35–62. doi:10.1016/S0025-3227(98)00206-0. Retrieved 5 June 2022.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Global Volcanism Program Database". Retrieved 11 June 2022.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "VLIMAR Gazetteer".
- ^ Wysoczanski, Richard; Leonard, Graham; Gill, James; Wright, Ian; Calvert, Andrew; McIntosh, William; Jicha, Brian; Gamble, John; Timm, Christian; Handler, Monica; Drewes-Todd, Elizabeth; Zohrab, Alex (2019). "Ar-Ar age constraints on the timing of HavreTrough opening and magmatism". New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics. 62 (3): 371–377. doi:10.1080/00288306.2019.1602059. hdl:10468/7735.
- ^ a b John H. Latter, Edwards F. Lloyd, Ian E.M. Smith, and Simon Nathan. () New Zealand's volcanoes: Kermadec Islands Archived 2010-05-22 at the Wayback Machine. Volcanic Hazards Working Group, Civil Defence Scientific Advisory Committee.
- ^ Wunderman, R (ed.). "Report on Rumble III (New Zealand) — February 2011". Bulletin of the Global Volcanism Network. 36 (1). Smithsonian Institution. doi:10.5479/si.GVP.BGVN201102-241130. Retrieved 11 June 2022.