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Temporal variation of the oldest Emperor-Hawaiian plume signature influenced by interaction with shallow mantle features

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posted on 2025-08-06, 13:46 authored by Pamela Kempton, C Adam, A Saunders, Tiffany BarryTiffany Barry
<p dir="ltr">Hawaiian volcanoes <∼7 Ma are believed to originate from two different portions of the deep mantle: Loa‐trend volcanoes originate from within the Pacific Large Low Shear Velocity Province (LLSVP), whereas Kea‐trend volcanoes tap ambient mantle adjacent to the LLSVP. To assess whether the Emperor‐Hawaiian plume maintained this association throughout its history, we present new geochemical data (trace elements, Sr‐Nd‐Pb‐Hf isotopes) and geodynamical modeling for Emperor Seamounts ranging from >81 Ma (Meiji and Detroit Seamounts) to ∼50 Ma (Kōko Seamount). We show that Emperor seamounts differ from younger Hawaiian Islands in the abundance of isotopically depleted components. In εHf‐εNd isotope space, Detroit lavas trend toward a high εHf component similar to that observed in other mantle plumes (e.g., Iceland, Galápagos). This component originated deep within the mantle, possibly as a sheath surrounding the plume stem. Sampling of this component was facilitated by Detroit being ridge‐proximal when it formed (∼81–76 Ma). Emperor seamounts younger than Suiko (∼68 Ma) were intraplate and located beneath progressively older, thicker lithospheres. Backtracked locations of Emperor seamounts lie up to 15° latitude north of the Pacific LLSVP. This suggests that the ancestral Emperor‐Hawaiian plume was either (a) not initially associated with the Pacific LLSVP, (b) was deflected northward by shallow mantle features such that plume‐ridge interactions dominated in the upper mantle or convective flow patterns modified the plume structure in the mid mantle, or (c) the edge of the Pacific LLSVP receded southward by more than 15° over the past ∼100 m.y.</p>

Funding

Natural Environment Research Council. Grant Number: NER/T/S/2001/00228

History

Author affiliation

College of Science & Engineering Geography, Geology & Environment

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems

Volume

26

Issue

6

Publisher

American Geophysical Union

issn

1525-2027

eissn

1525-2027

Copyright date

2025

Available date

2025-08-06

Language

en

Deposited by

Dr Tiffany Barry

Deposit date

2025-07-09

Data Access Statement

All data in Tables S1 and S2 (major elements, trace elements and isotopes) used in the study are available from the Kansas State University Research Exchange (K-Rex) via https://hdl.handle.net/2097/45025.

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