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Musicians Seamounts

Coordinates: 30°N 162°W / 30°N 162°W / 30; -162[1] Musicians Seamounts are a chain of seamounts in the Pacific Ocean, north of the Hawaiian Ridge. There are about 65 seamounts, some of which are named after musicians. These seamounts exist in two chains, one of which has been attributed to a probably now-extinct hotspot called the Euterpe hotspot. Others may have formed in response to plate tectonics associated with the boundary between the Pacific Plate and the former Farallon Plate.

Musicians Seamounts are in the upper-central sector of the image

The seamounts were constructed on young oceanic crust during the Cretaceous, but a second phase of volcanic activity took place during the Eocene. Deep sea coral reefs occur on the seamounts.

Geography and geomorphology

The Musicians Seamounts lie in the north-central Pacific,[2][3] north of the Hawaiian Ridge north and northwest of Necker Island,[4] extending over a length of 1,200 kilometres (750 mi).[5] The seamounts were formerly known as the North Hawaiian Seamount Range[6] and were among the first submarine mountains to be thoroughly researched.[7]

 
Landscape on Mozart Seamount

The seamounts consist of two separate chains (one trending in north-south direction parallel to the Emperor Seamounts and the other in northwest-southeast direction parallel to the northern Line Islands) of ridges that extend east-west and seamounts.[3] Seamounts have usually an elliptical cross section and heights of 1,000–4,000 metres (3,300–13,100 ft)[2] and no flat tops like other seamounts south of the Hawaiian Ridge; the highest is Liszt Seamount whose summit has a depth of 1,582 metres (5,190 ft).[8] The ridges contain individual volcanoes and reach lengths of over 400 kilometres (250 mi); in the Italian[a] and Bach Ridges the volcanoes are 2.2–5.1 kilometres (1.4–3.2 mi) high. The Musicians horst and the Southern Ridges are additional features of the Musicians Seamounts.[1] Larger than the seamounts are volcanic lineaments, on which the seamounts formed.[10] Terrain observed by remotely operated vehicles shows large blocks, pillow lavas, flat terrain, lava flows and talus.[11]

Map all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 
Download coordinates as: KML

The total number of seamounts is about 65,[5] some of which Henry William Menard named after 18th century musicians.[12] Among the seamounts known by name are:[13][4][14][15]

Geology

The Pacific Ocean floor beneath the seamounts is of Cretaceous age and is subdivided by the Murray Fracture Zone into an older northern (100 to 95 million years ago) and a younger southern (80 to 85 million years ago) sector.[3] To the north, the Musicians Seamounts are limited by the Pioneer Fracture Zone.[18] The Musicians Seamounts developed on crust that was no more than 20 million years old,[3] and paleomagnetic information indicates that the seamounts were located between 0 and 10° north of the equator when they developed.[19] Only several of the seamounts reached above sea level.[20]

Rock samples dredged from the seamounts include basalt, hawaiite, mugearite and trachyte. Minerals contained in the rocks consist of aegirine, augite, clinopyroxene, feldspar, oxidized olivine, orthopyroxene, plagioclase and pyroxene. Calcite, clay and zeolites have formed through alteration processes,[21] and manganese nodules have been encountered as well.[22] The petrogenesis of Musicians Seamounts magmas has been explained by the mixing of several mantle-derived components.[23]

Origin

The origin of the seamounts has been explained with either one or two hotspots of Cretaceous age.[3] Dating of the seamounts supports a hotspot origin only for the northwest-southeast trend, however.[19] This hotspot has been named Euterpe hotspot after Euterpe, Greek Muse of musicians.[1] Plate reconstructions for the time period based on the dates of the northwest-southeast trend and the older Line Islands are consistent with each other.[24]

It is possible that their formation was influenced by the nearby presence of a spreading ridge,[25] a process which has been suggested for other hotspots such as Réunion, Iceland, Azores and others as well.[26] The Pacific-Farallon Ridge was located east of the Musicians Seamounts and flow from the hotspot to the ridge may have generated the east-west trending ridges of the Musicians Seamounts.[1]

Alternative explanations for the formation of the Musicians Seamounts is the presence of a former spreading ridge at their site,[18] and crustal weaknesses associated with the so-called "bending line" in the region which was formed by a change in the motion of the Pacific Plate.[27]

Geologic context

About 10,000 seamounts and islands are estimated to dot the floor of the Pacific Ocean, forming clusters and chains.[28] The origin of chains of seamounts and islands is commonly explained with the hotspot hypothesis, which posits that as the crust migrates above a stationary hotspot volcanism forms these structures. A further hypothesis states that the hotspots, sourced from mantle plumes, are static with respect to each other and thus geologists can reconstruct the history of plate movement by analyzing the tracks traced on the crust by hotspots.[29]

The Pacific Ocean contains a number of seamount and island chains,[29] some of which have been attributed to hotspots such as the Cobb hotspot, Caroline hotspot, Hawaiian hotspot, Marquesas hotspot, Tahiti hotspot, Pitcairn hotspot, Macdonald hotspot and Louisville hotspot.[3] Not all of these hotspots are necessarily fed by a deep continuous mantle plume; some may be nourished by discrete batches of melting material that rise through the mantle.[25] Other chains may be controlled by mantle flow towards a spreading ridge, which has been proposed for the Musicians chain.[30]

Biology

Deep sea corals and sponges grow on the Musicians Seamounts;[31] corals identified include Antipathes, Acanthogorgia, chrysogorgidae, Hemicorallium, isididae, Paracalyptrophora, Pleurogorgia and primnoids, while sponges include Caulophacus, Hyalostylus, Poliopogon and Saccocalyx. In some places true "coral forests" grow on the seamounts. Animal species observed on the seamounts by remotely operated vehicles include amphipods, anemones, anglerfish, arrow worms, bristlemouths, brittle stars, cephalopods, chirons, codling fish, ctenophores, crinoids, cusk eels, fangtooth fish, halosaurs, jellyfish, larvaceans, piglet squid, polychaetes, ribbon worms, sea cucumbers, sea elephants, sea pens, sea spiders, sea stars, shrimp, siphonophores, spider crabs, squat lobsters, urchins and zoanthids.[11]

Eruptive history

The Musicians Seamounts were active during the Late Cretaceous.[3] Ages obtained on some seamounts range from 96 million years ago for the Northwest Cluster, over 94 million years ago for Hammerstein, 91 million years ago for Mahler, 90 million years ago for Brahms, 86 million years ago for Rachmaninoff, 84 million years ago for Liszt, 83 million years ago for Khatchaturian and West Schumann, 82 million years ago for West Mendelssohn, 79 million years ago for East Mendelssohn, 75 million years ago for Bach Ridge and Haydn to 65 million years ago for Paumakua.[13]

Based on considerations derived from plate tectonics, earlier volcanism could have occurred on the Farallon Plate,[1] which has been subducted in its entirely and its volcanoes have now vanished.[32] No volcanism in the Musicians Seamounts post-dating about 70 million years ago was discovered at first;[19] either volcanism ceased at that time or it continued on the Farallon Plate again.[25] The Euterpe hotspot is now extinct,[b][1] although an unusually shallow ocean region around 0°S 148°W / -0°N 148°W / -0; -148 may be a remnant of the Euterpe hotspot.[33]

Some of the ridges in the Musicians Seamounts have much younger ages, 53 to 52 million years ago by argon-argon dating[34] and continuing to 48 to 47 million years ago.[35] This volcanism occurred at the time of major changes in the motion of the Pacific Plate; stresses occurring within the plate may have reactivated the Musicians volcanoes and resulted in this late stage activity.[36] One earthquake has been recorded in the province during historical time.[37]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ In the northeasternmost Musicians Seamounts.[9]
  2. ^ If the hotspot was still active, it would be located at 10°S 124°W / 10°S 124°W / -10; -124.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Chuanshun et al. 2008, p. 460.
  2. ^ a b Freedman & Parsons 1986, p. 8326.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Pringle 1993, p. 188.
  4. ^ a b Clague & Dalrymple 1975, p. 306.
  5. ^ a b Rea & Naugler 1971, p. 89.
  6. ^ Rea & Naugler 1971, p. 90.
  7. ^ Kvile, Kristina Ø.; Taranto, Gerald H.; Pitcher, Tony J.; Morato, Telmo (May 2014). "A global assessment of seamount ecosystems knowledge using an ecosystem evaluation framework". Biological Conservation. 173: 117. doi:10.1016/j.biocon.2013.10.002. ISSN 0006-3207.
  8. ^ Rea & Naugler 1971, p. 91.
  9. ^ Watts, Anthony B. (2010). Treatise on Geophysics, Volume 6: Crust and Lithosphere Dynamics. Elsevier. p. 40. ISBN 9780444535726.
  10. ^ Cantwell et al. 2020, p. 29.
  11. ^ a b "Daily Updates". Okeanos Explorer. NOAA. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
  12. ^ "Marine Gazetteer Placedetails: Musicians Seamounts". Marine Regions. Flanders Marine Institute. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
  13. ^ a b Pringle 1993, p. 189.
  14. ^ Dixon, T. H.; Naraghi, M.; McNutt, M. K.; Smith, S. M. (1983). "Bathymetric prediction from SEASAT altimeter data". Journal of Geophysical Research. 88 (C3): 1563. Bibcode:1983JGR....88.1563D. doi:10.1029/jc088ic03p01563.
  15. ^ Freedman & Parsons 1986, p. 8328.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s "Marine Gazetteer geographic name search". Marine Regions. Flanders Marine Institute. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Freymueller, Jeffrey T.; Kellogg, James N. (1992). Isostasy and Tectonic Origins of Pacific Seamounts. Geology and Offshore Mineral Resources of the Central Pacific Basin. Circum-Pacific Council for Energy and Mineral Resources Earth Science Series. Vol. 14. Springer, New York, NY. pp. 44–45. doi:10.1007/978-1-4612-2896-7_4. ISBN 978-0-387-97771-3.
  18. ^ a b Freedman & Parsons 1986, p. 8327.
  19. ^ a b c Pringle 1993, p. 211.
  20. ^ Cantwell et al. 2020, p. 7.
  21. ^ Pringle 1993, pp. 190–191.
  22. ^ Andreyev, S. I.; Kulikov, A. N.; Anikeyeva, L. I. (29 June 2010). "Sedimentation Rates in Areas of Nodule Formation in the Pacific Ocean". International Geology Review. 29 (9): 1095. doi:10.1080/00206818709466203.
  23. ^ Chuanshun et al. 2008, p. 467.
  24. ^ Pringle 1993, p. 213.
  25. ^ a b c Pringle 1993, p. 212.
  26. ^ Chuanshun et al. 2008, p. 459.
  27. ^ Rea, David K. (10 March 1970). "Changes in structure and trend of fracture zones north of the Hawaiian Ridge and relation to sea-floor spreading". Journal of Geophysical Research. 75 (8): 1421. Bibcode:1970JGR....75.1421R. doi:10.1029/JB075i008p01421.
  28. ^ Clague & Dalrymple 1975, p. 305.
  29. ^ a b Pringle 1993, p. 187.
  30. ^ Weeraratne, D. S.; Parmentier, E. M.; Forsyth, D. W. (1 December 2003). "Viscous Fingering of Miscible Fluids in Laboratory Experiments and the Oceanic Mantle Asthenosphere". AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts. 2003: V21B–03. Bibcode:2003AGUFM.V21B..03W.
  31. ^ "Overture to the Musicians Seamounts". Okeanos Explorer. NOAA. 9 September 2017. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
  32. ^ Chuanshun et al. 2008, p. 461.
  33. ^ Emiliani, Cesare (2005). The Oceanic Lithosphere. Harvard University Press. p. 481. ISBN 9780674017368.
  34. ^ O'Connor et al. 2015, p. 393.
  35. ^ O'Connor et al. 2015, p. 394.
  36. ^ O'Connor et al. 2015, p. 395.
  37. ^ Wysession, Michael E.; Okal, Emile A.; Miller, Kristin L. (February 1991). "Intraplate seismicity of the Pacific Basin, 1913?1988". Pure and Applied Geophysics. 135 (2): 321. Bibcode:1991PApGe.135..261W. doi:10.1007/BF00880241. S2CID 129095207.

Sources

  • Cantwell, K.; Smith, J.R.; Putts, M.; White, M.P.; Cantelas, F; Bowman, A. (2020). EX-17-08 Expedition Report: Deep-Sea Symphony: Exploring the Musicians Seamounts (ROV/Mapping) (Report). OER Expedition Cruise Report. EX-17-08. Silver Spring, MD 20910: Office of Ocean Exploration and Research, Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research, NOAA. p. 64. doi:10.25923/pvw9-b391.{{cite report}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  • Chuanshun, Li; Yucheng, Pan; Anchun, Li; Batiza, Rodey (1 November 2008). "Geochemistry of the lava and its implications in Musicians Seamounts". Chinese Journal of Oceanology and Limnology. 26 (4): 459–468. Bibcode:2008ChJOL..26..459L. doi:10.1007/s00343-008-0459-8. ISSN 0254-4059. S2CID 140690439.
  • Clague, David A.; Dalrymple, G. Brent (July 1975). "Cretaceous K-Ar ages of volcanic rocks from the Musicians Seamounts and the Hawaiian Ridge". Geophysical Research Letters. 2 (7): 305–308. Bibcode:1975GeoRL...2..305C. doi:10.1029/gl002i007p00305.
  • Freedman, Adam P.; Parsons, Barry (1986). "Seasat-derived gravity over the Musicians Seamounts". Journal of Geophysical Research. 91 (B8): 8325. Bibcode:1986JGR....91.8325F. doi:10.1029/JB091iB08p08325.
  • O'Connor, John M.; Hoernle, Kaj; Müller, R. Dietmar; Morgan, Jason P.; Butterworth, Nathaniel P.; Hauff, Folkmar; Sandwell, David T.; Jokat, Wilfried; Wijbrans, Jan R.; Stoffers, Peter (2015). "Deformation-related volcanism in the Pacific Ocean linked to the Hawaiian–Emperor bend". Nature Geoscience. 8 (5): 393–397. Bibcode:2015NatGe...8..393O. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.731.7411. doi:10.1038/ngeo2416. ISSN 1752-0908.
  • Pringle, Malcolm S. (1993). "Age progressive volcanism in the Musicians Seamounts: A test of the hot spot hypothesis for the Late Cretaceous Pacific". The Mesozoic Pacific: Geology, Tectonics, and Volcanism: A Volume in Memory of Sy Schlanger. Geophysical Monograph Series. Vol. 77. pp. 187–215. doi:10.1029/GM077p0187. ISBN 978-0-87590-036-0.
  • Rea, David K.; Naugler, Frederic P. (February 1971). "Musicians seamount province and related crustal structures north of the Hawaiian ridge". Marine Geology. 10 (2): 89–111. Bibcode:1971MGeol..10...89R. doi:10.1016/0025-3227(71)90048-X. ISSN 0025-3227.

External links

  • Pringle, Malcolm (1991). Geochronology and petrology of the Musicians Seamounts: The search for hot spot volcanism in the Cretaceous Pacific. Ph.D. Diss. Univ. of Hawaii at Manoa.
  • NOAA Images Collection

musicians, seamounts, coordinates, chain, seamounts, pacific, ocean, north, hawaiian, ridge, there, about, seamounts, some, which, named, after, musicians, these, seamounts, exist, chains, which, been, attributed, probably, extinct, hotspot, called, euterpe, h. Coordinates 30 N 162 W 30 N 162 W 30 162 1 Musicians Seamounts are a chain of seamounts in the Pacific Ocean north of the Hawaiian Ridge There are about 65 seamounts some of which are named after musicians These seamounts exist in two chains one of which has been attributed to a probably now extinct hotspot called the Euterpe hotspot Others may have formed in response to plate tectonics associated with the boundary between the Pacific Plate and the former Farallon Plate Musicians Seamounts are in the upper central sector of the image The seamounts were constructed on young oceanic crust during the Cretaceous but a second phase of volcanic activity took place during the Eocene Deep sea coral reefs occur on the seamounts Contents 1 Geography and geomorphology 2 Geology 2 1 Origin 2 2 Geologic context 3 Biology 4 Eruptive history 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Sources 8 External linksGeography and geomorphology EditThe Musicians Seamounts lie in the north central Pacific 2 3 north of the Hawaiian Ridge north and northwest of Necker Island 4 extending over a length of 1 200 kilometres 750 mi 5 The seamounts were formerly known as the North Hawaiian Seamount Range 6 and were among the first submarine mountains to be thoroughly researched 7 Landscape on Mozart Seamount The seamounts consist of two separate chains one trending in north south direction parallel to the Emperor Seamounts and the other in northwest southeast direction parallel to the northern Line Islands of ridges that extend east west and seamounts 3 Seamounts have usually an elliptical cross section and heights of 1 000 4 000 metres 3 300 13 100 ft 2 and no flat tops like other seamounts south of the Hawaiian Ridge the highest is Liszt Seamount whose summit has a depth of 1 582 metres 5 190 ft 8 The ridges contain individual volcanoes and reach lengths of over 400 kilometres 250 mi in the Italian a and Bach Ridges the volcanoes are 2 2 5 1 kilometres 1 4 3 2 mi high The Musicians horst and the Southern Ridges are additional features of the Musicians Seamounts 1 Larger than the seamounts are volcanic lineaments on which the seamounts formed 10 Terrain observed by remotely operated vehicles shows large blocks pillow lavas flat terrain lava flows and talus 11 Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap Download coordinates as KMLThe total number of seamounts is about 65 5 some of which Henry William Menard named after 18th century musicians 12 Among the seamounts known by name are 13 4 14 15 The Northwest Cluster Rossini 32 12 N 163 00 W 32 200 N 163 000 W 32 200 163 000 16 Bizet 32 16 N 161 38 W 32 26 N 161 63 W 32 26 161 63 17 Godard 31 29 N 164 34 W 31 48 N 164 56 W 31 48 164 56 17 Wagner 31 46 N 162 54 W 31 767 N 162 900 W 31 767 162 900 16 Shostakovich 33 16 N 164 53 W 33 267 N 164 883 W 33 267 164 883 16 Strauss 33 18 N 164 09 W 33 300 N 164 150 W 33 300 164 150 16 Bellini 32 42 N 163 11 W 32 700 N 163 183 W 32 700 163 183 16 Verdi 31 36 N 162 54 W 31 60 N 162 90 W 31 60 162 90 17 Puccini 32 15 N 162 21 W 32 250 N 162 350 W 32 250 162 350 16 Schubert 31 54 N 162 06 W 31 90 N 162 10 W 31 90 162 10 17 Donizetti 32 20 N 160 00 W 32 33 N 160 00 W 32 33 160 00 17 Hammerstein 32 28 N 165 46 W 32 46 N 165 76 W 32 46 165 76 17 Mahler 31 36 N 165 00 W 31 60 N 165 00 W 31 60 165 00 17 Brahms 31 09 N 162 19 W 31 15 N 162 31 W 31 15 162 31 17 Mussorgski 30 22 N 163 50 W 30 367 N 163 833 W 30 367 163 833 16 Debussy 30 18 N 162 05 W 30 30 N 162 09 W 30 30 162 09 17 Dvorak 30 31 N 161 20 W 30 517 N 161 333 W 30 517 161 333 16 Rachmaninoff 29 35 16 6 N 163 21 0 6 W 29 587944 N 163 350167 W 29 587944 163 350167 16 Tchaikovsky 29 23 N 162 05 W 29 39 N 162 09 W 29 39 162 09 17 Liszt 29 00 N 162 00 W 29 00 N 162 00 W 29 00 162 00 17 Paganini 28 41 N 162 40 W 28 683 N 162 667 W 28 683 162 667 16 Mozart 28 40 N 161 43 W 28 667 N 161 717 W 28 667 161 717 16 Khachaturian 28 8 27 9 N 162 18 54 6 W 28 141083 N 162 315167 W 28 141083 162 315167 16 Grieg 27 51 N 162 03 W 27 850 N 162 050 W 27 850 162 050 16 Gounod 27 53 N 161 20 W 27 883 N 161 333 W 27 883 161 333 16 Handel 27 30 N 159 48 W 27 50 N 159 80 W 27 50 159 80 17 Scarlatti 27 38 5 7 N 160 14 10 5 W 27 634917 N 160 236250 W 27 634917 160 236250 16 Ravel 27 16 N 161 40 W 27 267 N 161 667 W 27 267 161 667 16 Gluck 26 53 N 160 06 W 26 883 N 160 100 W 26 883 160 100 16 Sibelius 27 13 N 160 44 W 27 217 N 160 733 W 27 217 160 733 16 Chopin 26 06 N 162 00 W 26 10 N 162 00 W 26 10 162 00 17 Haydn 26 40 N 161 12 W 26 67 N 161 20 W 26 67 161 20 17 Bach Ridge 26 30 N 158 24 W 26 50 N 158 40 W 26 50 158 40 17 West Schumann West Mendelssohn East Mendelssohn Prokofiev 25 51 N 157 53 W 25 850 N 157 883 W 25 850 157 883 16 Paumakua 24 50 N 157 05 W 24 83 N 157 08 W 24 83 157 08 17 Geology EditThe Pacific Ocean floor beneath the seamounts is of Cretaceous age and is subdivided by the Murray Fracture Zone into an older northern 100 to 95 million years ago and a younger southern 80 to 85 million years ago sector 3 To the north the Musicians Seamounts are limited by the Pioneer Fracture Zone 18 The Musicians Seamounts developed on crust that was no more than 20 million years old 3 and paleomagnetic information indicates that the seamounts were located between 0 and 10 north of the equator when they developed 19 Only several of the seamounts reached above sea level 20 Rock samples dredged from the seamounts include basalt hawaiite mugearite and trachyte Minerals contained in the rocks consist of aegirine augite clinopyroxene feldspar oxidized olivine orthopyroxene plagioclase and pyroxene Calcite clay and zeolites have formed through alteration processes 21 and manganese nodules have been encountered as well 22 The petrogenesis of Musicians Seamounts magmas has been explained by the mixing of several mantle derived components 23 Origin Edit The origin of the seamounts has been explained with either one or two hotspots of Cretaceous age 3 Dating of the seamounts supports a hotspot origin only for the northwest southeast trend however 19 This hotspot has been named Euterpe hotspot after Euterpe Greek Muse of musicians 1 Plate reconstructions for the time period based on the dates of the northwest southeast trend and the older Line Islands are consistent with each other 24 It is possible that their formation was influenced by the nearby presence of a spreading ridge 25 a process which has been suggested for other hotspots such as Reunion Iceland Azores and others as well 26 The Pacific Farallon Ridge was located east of the Musicians Seamounts and flow from the hotspot to the ridge may have generated the east west trending ridges of the Musicians Seamounts 1 Alternative explanations for the formation of the Musicians Seamounts is the presence of a former spreading ridge at their site 18 and crustal weaknesses associated with the so called bending line in the region which was formed by a change in the motion of the Pacific Plate 27 Geologic context Edit About 10 000 seamounts and islands are estimated to dot the floor of the Pacific Ocean forming clusters and chains 28 The origin of chains of seamounts and islands is commonly explained with the hotspot hypothesis which posits that as the crust migrates above a stationary hotspot volcanism forms these structures A further hypothesis states that the hotspots sourced from mantle plumes are static with respect to each other and thus geologists can reconstruct the history of plate movement by analyzing the tracks traced on the crust by hotspots 29 The Pacific Ocean contains a number of seamount and island chains 29 some of which have been attributed to hotspots such as the Cobb hotspot Caroline hotspot Hawaiian hotspot Marquesas hotspot Tahiti hotspot Pitcairn hotspot Macdonald hotspot and Louisville hotspot 3 Not all of these hotspots are necessarily fed by a deep continuous mantle plume some may be nourished by discrete batches of melting material that rise through the mantle 25 Other chains may be controlled by mantle flow towards a spreading ridge which has been proposed for the Musicians chain 30 Biology EditDeep sea corals and sponges grow on the Musicians Seamounts 31 corals identified include Antipathes Acanthogorgia chrysogorgidae Hemicorallium isididae Paracalyptrophora Pleurogorgia and primnoids while sponges include Caulophacus Hyalostylus Poliopogon and Saccocalyx In some places true coral forests grow on the seamounts Animal species observed on the seamounts by remotely operated vehicles include amphipods anemones anglerfish arrow worms bristlemouths brittle stars cephalopods chirons codling fish ctenophores crinoids cusk eels fangtooth fish halosaurs jellyfish larvaceans piglet squid polychaetes ribbon worms sea cucumbers sea elephants sea pens sea spiders sea stars shrimp siphonophores spider crabs squat lobsters urchins and zoanthids 11 Eruptive history EditThe Musicians Seamounts were active during the Late Cretaceous 3 Ages obtained on some seamounts range from 96 million years ago for the Northwest Cluster over 94 million years ago for Hammerstein 91 million years ago for Mahler 90 million years ago for Brahms 86 million years ago for Rachmaninoff 84 million years ago for Liszt 83 million years ago for Khatchaturian and West Schumann 82 million years ago for West Mendelssohn 79 million years ago for East Mendelssohn 75 million years ago for Bach Ridge and Haydn to 65 million years ago for Paumakua 13 Based on considerations derived from plate tectonics earlier volcanism could have occurred on the Farallon Plate 1 which has been subducted in its entirely and its volcanoes have now vanished 32 No volcanism in the Musicians Seamounts post dating about 70 million years ago was discovered at first 19 either volcanism ceased at that time or it continued on the Farallon Plate again 25 The Euterpe hotspot is now extinct b 1 although an unusually shallow ocean region around 0 S 148 W 0 N 148 W 0 148 may be a remnant of the Euterpe hotspot 33 Some of the ridges in the Musicians Seamounts have much younger ages 53 to 52 million years ago by argon argon dating 34 and continuing to 48 to 47 million years ago 35 This volcanism occurred at the time of major changes in the motion of the Pacific Plate stresses occurring within the plate may have reactivated the Musicians volcanoes and resulted in this late stage activity 36 One earthquake has been recorded in the province during historical time 37 See also EditGeologists SeamountsNotes Edit In the northeasternmost Musicians Seamounts 9 If the hotspot was still active it would be located at 10 S 124 W 10 S 124 W 10 124 1 References Edit a b c d e f g Chuanshun et al 2008 p 460 a b Freedman amp Parsons 1986 p 8326 a b c d e f g Pringle 1993 p 188 a b Clague amp Dalrymple 1975 p 306 a b Rea amp Naugler 1971 p 89 Rea amp Naugler 1971 p 90 Kvile Kristina O Taranto Gerald H Pitcher Tony J Morato Telmo May 2014 A global assessment of seamount ecosystems knowledge using an ecosystem evaluation framework Biological Conservation 173 117 doi 10 1016 j biocon 2013 10 002 ISSN 0006 3207 Rea amp Naugler 1971 p 91 Watts Anthony B 2010 Treatise on Geophysics Volume 6 Crust and Lithosphere Dynamics Elsevier p 40 ISBN 9780444535726 Cantwell et al 2020 p 29 a b Daily Updates Okeanos Explorer NOAA Retrieved 18 March 2018 Marine Gazetteer Placedetails Musicians Seamounts Marine Regions Flanders Marine Institute Retrieved 18 March 2018 a b Pringle 1993 p 189 Dixon T H Naraghi M McNutt M K Smith S M 1983 Bathymetric prediction from SEASAT altimeter data Journal of Geophysical Research 88 C3 1563 Bibcode 1983JGR 88 1563D doi 10 1029 jc088ic03p01563 Freedman amp Parsons 1986 p 8328 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Marine Gazetteer geographic name search Marine Regions Flanders Marine Institute Retrieved 18 March 2018 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Freymueller Jeffrey T Kellogg James N 1992 Isostasy and Tectonic Origins of Pacific Seamounts Geology and Offshore Mineral Resources of the Central Pacific Basin Circum Pacific Council for Energy and Mineral Resources Earth Science Series Vol 14 Springer New York NY pp 44 45 doi 10 1007 978 1 4612 2896 7 4 ISBN 978 0 387 97771 3 a b Freedman amp Parsons 1986 p 8327 a b c Pringle 1993 p 211 Cantwell et al 2020 p 7 Pringle 1993 pp 190 191 Andreyev S I Kulikov A N Anikeyeva L I 29 June 2010 Sedimentation Rates in Areas of Nodule Formation in the Pacific Ocean International Geology Review 29 9 1095 doi 10 1080 00206818709466203 Chuanshun et al 2008 p 467 Pringle 1993 p 213 a b c Pringle 1993 p 212 Chuanshun et al 2008 p 459 Rea David K 10 March 1970 Changes in structure and trend of fracture zones north of the Hawaiian Ridge and relation to sea floor spreading Journal of Geophysical Research 75 8 1421 Bibcode 1970JGR 75 1421R doi 10 1029 JB075i008p01421 Clague amp Dalrymple 1975 p 305 a b Pringle 1993 p 187 Weeraratne D S Parmentier E M Forsyth D W 1 December 2003 Viscous Fingering of Miscible Fluids in Laboratory Experiments and the Oceanic Mantle Asthenosphere AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts 2003 V21B 03 Bibcode 2003AGUFM V21B 03W Overture to the Musicians Seamounts Okeanos Explorer NOAA 9 September 2017 Retrieved 18 March 2018 Chuanshun et al 2008 p 461 Emiliani Cesare 2005 The Oceanic Lithosphere Harvard University Press p 481 ISBN 9780674017368 O Connor et al 2015 p 393 O Connor et al 2015 p 394 O Connor et al 2015 p 395 Wysession Michael E Okal Emile A Miller Kristin L February 1991 Intraplate seismicity of the Pacific Basin 1913 1988 Pure and Applied Geophysics 135 2 321 Bibcode 1991PApGe 135 261W doi 10 1007 BF00880241 S2CID 129095207 Sources Edit Cantwell K Smith J R Putts M White M P Cantelas F Bowman A 2020 EX 17 08 Expedition Report Deep Sea Symphony Exploring the Musicians Seamounts ROV Mapping Report OER Expedition Cruise Report EX 17 08 Silver Spring MD 20910 Office of Ocean Exploration and Research Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research NOAA p 64 doi 10 25923 pvw9 b391 a href Template Cite report html title Template Cite report cite report a CS1 maint location link Chuanshun Li Yucheng Pan Anchun Li Batiza Rodey 1 November 2008 Geochemistry of the lava and its implications in Musicians Seamounts Chinese Journal of Oceanology and Limnology 26 4 459 468 Bibcode 2008ChJOL 26 459L doi 10 1007 s00343 008 0459 8 ISSN 0254 4059 S2CID 140690439 Clague David A Dalrymple G Brent July 1975 Cretaceous K Ar ages of volcanic rocks from the Musicians Seamounts and the Hawaiian Ridge Geophysical Research Letters 2 7 305 308 Bibcode 1975GeoRL 2 305C doi 10 1029 gl002i007p00305 Freedman Adam P Parsons Barry 1986 Seasat derived gravity over the Musicians Seamounts Journal of Geophysical Research 91 B8 8325 Bibcode 1986JGR 91 8325F doi 10 1029 JB091iB08p08325 O Connor John M Hoernle Kaj Muller R Dietmar Morgan Jason P Butterworth Nathaniel P Hauff Folkmar Sandwell David T Jokat Wilfried Wijbrans Jan R Stoffers Peter 2015 Deformation related volcanism in the Pacific Ocean linked to the Hawaiian Emperor bend Nature Geoscience 8 5 393 397 Bibcode 2015NatGe 8 393O CiteSeerX 10 1 1 731 7411 doi 10 1038 ngeo2416 ISSN 1752 0908 Pringle Malcolm S 1993 Age progressive volcanism in the Musicians Seamounts A test of the hot spot hypothesis for the Late Cretaceous Pacific The Mesozoic Pacific Geology Tectonics and Volcanism A Volume in Memory of Sy Schlanger Geophysical Monograph Series Vol 77 pp 187 215 doi 10 1029 GM077p0187 ISBN 978 0 87590 036 0 Rea David K Naugler Frederic P February 1971 Musicians seamount province and related crustal structures north of the Hawaiian ridge Marine Geology 10 2 89 111 Bibcode 1971MGeol 10 89R doi 10 1016 0025 3227 71 90048 X ISSN 0025 3227 External links EditPringle Malcolm 1991 Geochronology and petrology of the Musicians Seamounts The search for hot spot volcanism in the Cretaceous Pacific Ph D Diss Univ of Hawaii at Manoa NOAA Images Collection Wikimedia Commons has media related to Musicians Seamounts Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 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