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Magma-Assisted Flexure of Hawaiian Lithosphere Inferred From Three-Dimensional Models of Lithospheric Flexure Constrained by Active Source Seismic Data
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  • Daniel Douglas,
  • Garrett Apuzen-Ito,
  • Brian Boston,
  • Robert Allen Dunn,
  • John Naliboff,
  • Paul Wessel,
  • Anthony Brian Watts,
  • Donna Shillington,
  • Phillip Andrew Cilli
Daniel Douglas
New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Garrett Apuzen-Ito
University of Hawaii, Honolulu
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Brian Boston
Auburn University
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Robert Allen Dunn
University of Hawaii at Manoa
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John Naliboff
New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology
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Paul Wessel
SOEST, University of Hawaii at Manoa
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Anthony Brian Watts
University of Oxford
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Donna Shillington
Northern Arizona University
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Phillip Andrew Cilli
University of Oxford
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Abstract

Reprocessed and newly acquired seismic data provide new constraints on lithospheric flexure profiles beneath the Hawaiian Islands. We use these new observations and three-dimensional numerical models of lithospheric deformation combining elasticity, brittle failure, low-temperature plasticity (LTP) and high-temperature creep deformation mechanisms to constrain the thermal structure and rheology of the oceanic lithosphere lithosphere. When simulating normal oceanic lithospheric conditions with experimentally-derived LTP flow laws, the lithosphere flexes with too little amplitude and over too large a wavelength compared to observations. This result supports prior studies which call on the need to (1) adjust the LTP flow laws or, alternatively, to (2) account for magma-assisted flexural weakening of the lithosphere. Here, models that explore reductions in the activation energy of LTP are able to explain the observations of flexure with a smaller reduction than previously suggested. Models that explore elevated temperatures attributed to hotspot magmatism localized beneath the island edifices also produce close fits to the observed flexural profiles. Although the two factors cannot be distinguished based on fits to the flexure profiles, magma-assisted flexural weakening is supported by recent studies of geothermobarometry of pyroxenite xenoliths from O‘ahu, seismic structure and patterns of seismicity beneath the Hawaiian chain. If magma-assisted flexure is a common phenomenon at other ocean islands and seamounts, it could explain global trends in effective elastic plate thickness at those settings as well as at subduction zones and fracture zones.
26 Sep 2024Submitted to ESS Open Archive
28 Sep 2024Published in ESS Open Archive