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Triple junction

A triple junction is the point where the boundaries of three tectonic plates meet. At the triple junction each of the three boundaries will be one of three types – a ridge (R), trench (T) or transform fault (F) – and triple junctions can be described according to the types of plate margin that meet at them (e.g. Fault-Fault-Trench, Ridge-Ridge-Ridge, or abbreviated F-F-T, R-R-R). Of the ten possible types of triple junctions only a few are stable through time ('stable' in this context means that the geometrical configuration of the triple junction will not change through geologic time). The meeting of four or more plates is also theoretically possible but junctions will only exist instantaneously.[1]

Main tectonic plate boundaries – ridge (red), trench (green), fault (black) – and corresponding triple junctions (yellow dots)

History edit

The first scientific paper detailing the triple junction concept was published in 1969 by Dan McKenzie and W. Jason Morgan.[2] The term had traditionally been used for the intersection of three divergent boundaries or spreading ridges. These three divergent boundaries ideally meet at near 120° angles.

In plate tectonics theory during the breakup of a continent, three divergent boundaries form, radiating out from a central point (the triple junction). One of these divergent plate boundaries fails (see aulacogen) and the other two continue spreading to form an ocean. The opening of the south Atlantic Ocean started at the south of the South American and African continents, reaching a triple junction in the present Gulf of Guinea, from where it continued to the west. The NE-trending Benue Trough is the failed arm of this junction.[3]

In the years since, the term triple-junction has come to refer to any point where three tectonic plates meet.

Interpretation edit

The properties of triple junctions are most easily understood from the purely kinematic point of view where the plates are rigid and moving over the surface of the Earth. No knowledge of the Earth's interior or the geological details of the crust are then needed. Another useful simplification is that the kinematics of triple junctions on a flat Earth are essentially the same as those on the surface of a sphere. On a sphere, plate motions are described as relative rotations about Euler Poles (see Plate reconstruction), and the relative motion at every point along a plate boundary can be calculated from this rotation. But the area around a triple junction is small enough (relative to the size of the sphere) and (usually) far enough from the pole of rotation, that the relative motion across a boundary can be assumed to be constant along that boundary. Thus, analysis of triple junctions can usually be done on a flat surface with motions defined by vectors.

Stability edit

Triple junctions may be described and their stability assessed without use of the geological details but simply by defining the properties of the ridges, trenches and transform faults involved, making some simplifying assumptions and applying simple velocity calculations. This assessment can generalise to most actual triple junction settings provided the assumptions and definitions broadly apply to the real Earth.

A stable junction is one at which the geometry of the junction is retained with time as the plates involved move. This places restrictions on relative velocities and plate boundary orientation. An unstable triple junction will change with time, either to become another form of triple junction (RRF junctions easily evolve to FFR junctions), will change geometry or are simply not feasible (as in the case of FFF junctions). The inherent instability of an FFF junction is believed to have caused the formation of the Pacific Plate about 190 million years ago.[4]

By assuming that plates are rigid and that the Earth is spherical, Leonhard Euler’s theorem of motion on a sphere can be used to reduce the stability assessment to determining boundaries and relative motions of the interacting plates. The rigid assumption holds very well in the case of oceanic crust, and the radius of the Earth at the equator and poles only varies by a factor of roughly one part in 300 so the Earth approximates very well to a sphere.

McKenzie and Morgan[5] first analysed the stability of triple junctions using these assumptions with the additional assumption that the Euler poles describing the motions of the plates were such that they approximated to straight line motion on a flat surface. This simplification applies when the Euler poles are distant from the triple junction concerned. The definitions they used for R, T and F are as follows:

  • R – structures that produce lithosphere symmetrically and perpendicular to the relative velocity of the plates on either side (this does not always apply, for example in the Gulf of Aden).
  • T – structures that consume lithosphere from one side only. The relative velocity vector can be oblique to the plate boundary.
  • F – active faults parallel to the slip vector.

Stability criteria edit

For a triple junction between the plates A, B and C to exist, the following condition must be satisfied:

AvB + BvC + CvA = 0

where AvB is the relative motion of B with respect to A.

This condition can be represented in velocity space by constructing a velocity triangle ABC where the lengths AB, BC and CA are proportional to the velocities AvB, BvC and CvA respectively.

Further conditions must also be met for the triple junction to exist stably – the plates must move in a way that leaves their individual geometries unchanged. Alternatively the triple junction must move in such a way that it remains on all three of the plate boundaries involved.

McKenzie and Morgan[6] demonstrated that these criteria can be represented on the same velocity space diagrams in the following way. The lines ab, bc and ca join points in velocity space which will leave the geometry of AB, BC and CA unchanged. These lines are the same as those that join points in velocity space at which an observer could move at the given velocity and still remain on the plate boundary. When these are drawn onto the diagram containing the velocity triangle these lines must be able to meet at a single point, for the triple junction to exist stably.

These lines necessarily are parallel to the plate boundaries as to remain on the plate boundaries the observer must either move along the plate boundary or remain stationary on it.

  • For a ridge the line constructed must be the perpendicular bisector of the relative motion vector as to remain in the middle of the ridge an observer would have to move at half the relative speeds of the plates either side but could also move in a perpendicular direction along the plate boundary.
  • For a transform fault the line must be parallel to the relative motion vector as all of the motion is parallel to the boundary direction and so the line ab must lie along AB for a transform fault separating the plates A and B.
  • For an observer to remain on a trench boundary they must walk along the strike of the trench but remaining on the overriding plate. Therefore, the line constructed will lie parallel to the plate boundary but passing through the point in velocity space occupied by the overriding plate.

The point at which these lines meet, J, gives the overall motion of the triple junction with respect to the Earth.

Using these criteria it can easily be shown why the FFF triple junction is not stable: the only case in which three lines lying along the sides of a triangle can meet at a point is the trivial case in which the triangle has sides lengths zero, corresponding to zero relative motion between the plates. As faults are required to be active for the purpose of this assessment, an FFF junction can never be stable.

Types edit

McKenzie and Morgan determined that there were 16 types of triple junction theoretically possible, though several of these are speculative and have not necessarily been seen on Earth. These junctions were classified firstly by the types of plate boundaries meeting – for example RRR, TTR, RRT, FFT etc. – and secondly by the relative motion directions of the plates involved. Some configurations such as RRR can only have one set of relative motions whereas TTT junctions may be classified into TTT(a) and TTT(b). These differences in motion direction affect the stability criteria.

McKenzie and Morgan claimed that of these 16 types, 14 were stable with FFF and RRF configurations unstable, however, York[7] later showed that the RRF configuration could be stable under certain conditions.

Ridge-Ridge-Ridge junctions edit

 
A map of the Afar triangle in East Africa, an example of an RRR junction and the only triple junction on Earth that can be seen above sea level.

An RRR junction is always stable using these definitions and therefore very common on Earth, though in a geological sense ridge spreading is usually discontinued in one direction leaving a failed rift zone. There are many examples of these present both now and in the geological past such as the South Atlantic opening with ridges spreading North and South to form the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, and an associated aulacogen, the Benue Trough, in the Niger Delta region of Africa. RRR junctions are also common as rifting along three fractures at 120° is the best way to relieve stresses from uplift at the surface of a sphere; on Earth, stresses similar to these are believed to be caused by the mantle hotspots thought to initiate rifting in continents.

The stability of RRR junctions is demonstrated below – as the perpendicular bisectors of the sides of a triangle always meet at a single point, the lines ab, bc and ca can always be made to meet regardless of relative velocities.

Ridge-Trench-Fault junctions edit

RTF junctions are less common, an unstable junction of this type (an RTF(a)) is thought to have existed at roughly 12Ma at the mouth of the Gulf of California where the East Pacific Rise currently meets the San Andreas Fault zone.[8] The Guadeloupe and Farallon microplates were previously being subducted under the North American Plate and the northern end of this boundary met the San Andreas Fault. Material for this subduction was provided by a ridge equivalent to the modern East Pacific Rise slightly displaced to the west of the trench. As the ridge itself was subducted an RTF triple junction momentarily existed but subduction of the ridge caused the subducted lithosphere to weaken and ‘tear’ from the point of the triple junction. The loss of slab pull caused by the detachment of this lithosphere ended the RTF junction giving the present day ridge – fault system. An RTF(a) is stable if ab goes through the point in velocity space C, or if ac and bc are colinear.

Trench-Trench-Trench junctions edit

A TTT(a) junction can be found in central Japan where the Eurasian plate overrides the Philippine and Pacific plates, with the Philippine plate also overriding the Pacific. Here the Japan Trench effectively branches to form the Ryukyu and Bonin arcs. The stability criteria for this type of junction are either ab and ac form a straight line or that the line bc is parallel to CA.

Examples edit

 
The Nootka Fault at the triple junction of the North American Plate, the Explorer Plate, and the Juan de Fuca

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ C. M. R. Fowler; Connie May Fowler; Clarence Mary R. Fowler (2005). The Solid Earth: An Introduction to Global Geophysics. Cambridge University Press. p. 26. ISBN 978-0-521-58409-8.
  2. ^ McKenzie, D. P.; Morgan, W. J. (11 October 1969). "Evolution of Triple Junctions". Nature. 224 (5215): 125–133. Bibcode:1969Natur.224..125M. doi:10.1038/224125a0. S2CID 4151329.
  3. ^ S. W. Petters (May 1978). "Stratigraphic Evolution of the Benue Trough and Its Implications for the Upper Cretaceous Paleogeography of West Africa". The Journal of Geology. 86 (3): 311–322. Bibcode:1978JG.....86..311P. doi:10.1086/649693. JSTOR 30061985. S2CID 129346979.
  4. ^ Boschman, Lydian M.; Hinsbergen, Douwe J. J. van (2016-07-01). "On the enigmatic birth of the Pacific Plate within the Panthalassa Ocean". Science Advances. 2 (7): e1600022. Bibcode:2016SciA....2E0022B. doi:10.1126/sciadv.1600022. ISSN 2375-2548. PMC 5919776. PMID 29713683.
  5. ^ Evolution of Triple Junctions, McKenzie, D. P., and Morgan, W. J., Nature, 224, 125 (1969)
  6. ^ Evolution of Triple Junctions, McKenzie, D. P., and Morgan, W. J., Nature, 224, 125 (1969)
  7. ^ York, Derek (1973). "Evolution of Triple Junctions". Nature. 244 (5415): 341–342. doi:10.1038/244341a0. ISSN 0028-0836. S2CID 4202607.
  8. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-27. Retrieved 2009-11-21.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  9. ^ Sauter, D.; Mendel, V.; Rommeveaux-Jestin, C. (1997). "Propagation of the Southwest Indian Ridge at the Rodrigues Triple Junction". Journal Marine Geophysical Researches. 19 (6): 553–567. Bibcode:1997MarGR..19..553S. doi:10.1023/A:1004313109111. S2CID 127866775.
  10. ^ Carracedo, Juan Carlos; Troll, Valentin R. (2021-01-01), "North-East Atlantic Islands: The Macaronesian Archipelagos", in Alderton, David; Elias, Scott A. (eds.), Encyclopedia of Geology (Second Edition), Oxford: Academic Press, pp. 674–699, doi:10.1016/b978-0-08-102908-4.00027-8, ISBN 978-0-08-102909-1, S2CID 226588940, retrieved 2021-03-18
  11. ^ White, N.; Latin, D. (1993). (PDF). Journal of the Geological Society. 150 (3): 473–488. Bibcode:1993JGSoc.150..473W. doi:10.1144/gsjgs.150.3.0473. S2CID 129832756. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-08-12.
  12. ^ Oakey, Gordon N.; Stephenson, Randell (2008). "Crustal structure of the Innuitian region of Arctic Canada and Greenland from gravity modelling: implications for the Palaeogene Eurekan orogen" (PDF). Geophysical Journal International. Royal Astronomical Society. 173 (3): 1041. Bibcode:2008GeoJI.173.1039O. doi:10.1111/j.1365-246X.2008.03784.x. ISSN 0956-540X.

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For the solar cell configuration see Multi junction solar cell Not to be confused with triple point or triple divide A triple junction is the point where the boundaries of three tectonic plates meet At the triple junction each of the three boundaries will be one of three types a ridge R trench T or transform fault F and triple junctions can be described according to the types of plate margin that meet at them e g Fault Fault Trench Ridge Ridge Ridge or abbreviated F F T R R R Of the ten possible types of triple junctions only a few are stable through time stable in this context means that the geometrical configuration of the triple junction will not change through geologic time The meeting of four or more plates is also theoretically possible but junctions will only exist instantaneously 1 Main tectonic plate boundaries ridge red trench green fault black and corresponding triple junctions yellow dots Contents 1 History 2 Interpretation 3 Stability 3 1 Stability criteria 4 Types 4 1 Ridge Ridge Ridge junctions 4 2 Ridge Trench Fault junctions 4 3 Trench Trench Trench junctions 5 Examples 6 See also 7 ReferencesHistory editThe first scientific paper detailing the triple junction concept was published in 1969 by Dan McKenzie and W Jason Morgan 2 The term had traditionally been used for the intersection of three divergent boundaries or spreading ridges These three divergent boundaries ideally meet at near 120 angles In plate tectonics theory during the breakup of a continent three divergent boundaries form radiating out from a central point the triple junction One of these divergent plate boundaries fails see aulacogen and the other two continue spreading to form an ocean The opening of the south Atlantic Ocean started at the south of the South American and African continents reaching a triple junction in the present Gulf of Guinea from where it continued to the west The NE trending Benue Trough is the failed arm of this junction 3 In the years since the term triple junction has come to refer to any point where three tectonic plates meet Interpretation editThe properties of triple junctions are most easily understood from the purely kinematic point of view where the plates are rigid and moving over the surface of the Earth No knowledge of the Earth s interior or the geological details of the crust are then needed Another useful simplification is that the kinematics of triple junctions on a flat Earth are essentially the same as those on the surface of a sphere On a sphere plate motions are described as relative rotations about Euler Poles see Plate reconstruction and the relative motion at every point along a plate boundary can be calculated from this rotation But the area around a triple junction is small enough relative to the size of the sphere and usually far enough from the pole of rotation that the relative motion across a boundary can be assumed to be constant along that boundary Thus analysis of triple junctions can usually be done on a flat surface with motions defined by vectors Stability editTriple junctions may be described and their stability assessed without use of the geological details but simply by defining the properties of the ridges trenches and transform faults involved making some simplifying assumptions and applying simple velocity calculations This assessment can generalise to most actual triple junction settings provided the assumptions and definitions broadly apply to the real Earth A stable junction is one at which the geometry of the junction is retained with time as the plates involved move This places restrictions on relative velocities and plate boundary orientation An unstable triple junction will change with time either to become another form of triple junction RRF junctions easily evolve to FFR junctions will change geometry or are simply not feasible as in the case of FFF junctions The inherent instability of an FFF junction is believed to have caused the formation of the Pacific Plate about 190 million years ago 4 By assuming that plates are rigid and that the Earth is spherical Leonhard Euler s theorem of motion on a sphere can be used to reduce the stability assessment to determining boundaries and relative motions of the interacting plates The rigid assumption holds very well in the case of oceanic crust and the radius of the Earth at the equator and poles only varies by a factor of roughly one part in 300 so the Earth approximates very well to a sphere McKenzie and Morgan 5 first analysed the stability of triple junctions using these assumptions with the additional assumption that the Euler poles describing the motions of the plates were such that they approximated to straight line motion on a flat surface This simplification applies when the Euler poles are distant from the triple junction concerned The definitions they used for R T and F are as follows R structures that produce lithosphere symmetrically and perpendicular to the relative velocity of the plates on either side this does not always apply for example in the Gulf of Aden T structures that consume lithosphere from one side only The relative velocity vector can be oblique to the plate boundary F active faults parallel to the slip vector Stability criteria edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message For a triple junction between the plates A B and C to exist the following condition must be satisfied AvB BvC CvA 0where AvB is the relative motion of B with respect to A This condition can be represented in velocity space by constructing a velocity triangle ABC where the lengths AB BC and CA are proportional to the velocities AvB BvC and CvA respectively Further conditions must also be met for the triple junction to exist stably the plates must move in a way that leaves their individual geometries unchanged Alternatively the triple junction must move in such a way that it remains on all three of the plate boundaries involved McKenzie and Morgan 6 demonstrated that these criteria can be represented on the same velocity space diagrams in the following way The lines ab bc and ca join points in velocity space which will leave the geometry of AB BC and CA unchanged These lines are the same as those that join points in velocity space at which an observer could move at the given velocity and still remain on the plate boundary When these are drawn onto the diagram containing the velocity triangle these lines must be able to meet at a single point for the triple junction to exist stably These lines necessarily are parallel to the plate boundaries as to remain on the plate boundaries the observer must either move along the plate boundary or remain stationary on it For a ridge the line constructed must be the perpendicular bisector of the relative motion vector as to remain in the middle of the ridge an observer would have to move at half the relative speeds of the plates either side but could also move in a perpendicular direction along the plate boundary For a transform fault the line must be parallel to the relative motion vector as all of the motion is parallel to the boundary direction and so the line ab must lie along AB for a transform fault separating the plates A and B For an observer to remain on a trench boundary they must walk along the strike of the trench but remaining on the overriding plate Therefore the line constructed will lie parallel to the plate boundary but passing through the point in velocity space occupied by the overriding plate The point at which these lines meet J gives the overall motion of the triple junction with respect to the Earth Using these criteria it can easily be shown why the FFF triple junction is not stable the only case in which three lines lying along the sides of a triangle can meet at a point is the trivial case in which the triangle has sides lengths zero corresponding to zero relative motion between the plates As faults are required to be active for the purpose of this assessment an FFF junction can never be stable Types editMcKenzie and Morgan determined that there were 16 types of triple junction theoretically possible though several of these are speculative and have not necessarily been seen on Earth These junctions were classified firstly by the types of plate boundaries meeting for example RRR TTR RRT FFT etc and secondly by the relative motion directions of the plates involved Some configurations such as RRR can only have one set of relative motions whereas TTT junctions may be classified into TTT a and TTT b These differences in motion direction affect the stability criteria McKenzie and Morgan claimed that of these 16 types 14 were stable with FFF and RRF configurations unstable however York 7 later showed that the RRF configuration could be stable under certain conditions Ridge Ridge Ridge junctions edit nbsp A map of the Afar triangle in East Africa an example of an RRR junction and the only triple junction on Earth that can be seen above sea level An RRR junction is always stable using these definitions and therefore very common on Earth though in a geological sense ridge spreading is usually discontinued in one direction leaving a failed rift zone There are many examples of these present both now and in the geological past such as the South Atlantic opening with ridges spreading North and South to form the Mid Atlantic Ridge and an associated aulacogen the Benue Trough in the Niger Delta region of Africa RRR junctions are also common as rifting along three fractures at 120 is the best way to relieve stresses from uplift at the surface of a sphere on Earth stresses similar to these are believed to be caused by the mantle hotspots thought to initiate rifting in continents The stability of RRR junctions is demonstrated below as the perpendicular bisectors of the sides of a triangle always meet at a single point the lines ab bc and ca can always be made to meet regardless of relative velocities Ridge Trench Fault junctions edit RTF junctions are less common an unstable junction of this type an RTF a is thought to have existed at roughly 12Ma at the mouth of the Gulf of California where the East Pacific Rise currently meets the San Andreas Fault zone 8 The Guadeloupe and Farallon microplates were previously being subducted under the North American Plate and the northern end of this boundary met the San Andreas Fault Material for this subduction was provided by a ridge equivalent to the modern East Pacific Rise slightly displaced to the west of the trench As the ridge itself was subducted an RTF triple junction momentarily existed but subduction of the ridge caused the subducted lithosphere to weaken and tear from the point of the triple junction The loss of slab pull caused by the detachment of this lithosphere ended the RTF junction giving the present day ridge fault system An RTF a is stable if ab goes through the point in velocity space C or if ac and bc are colinear Trench Trench Trench junctions edit A TTT a junction can be found in central Japan where the Eurasian plate overrides the Philippine and Pacific plates with the Philippine plate also overriding the Pacific Here the Japan Trench effectively branches to form the Ryukyu and Bonin arcs The stability criteria for this type of junction are either ab and ac form a straight line or that the line bc is parallel to CA Examples edit nbsp The Nootka Fault at the triple junction of the North American Plate the Explorer Plate and the Juan de FucaThe junction of the Red Sea the Gulf of Aden and the East African Rift centered in the Afar Triangle the Afar Triple Junction is the only Ridge Ridge Ridge R R R triple junction above sea level The Rodrigues Triple Junction is a R R R triple junction in the southern Indian Ocean where the African the Indo Australian and the Antarctic Plates meet 9 The Galapagos Triple Junction is an R R R triple junction where the Nazca the Cocos and the Pacific Plates meet The East Pacific Rise extends north and south from this junction and the Galapagos Rise goes to the east This example is made more complex by the Galapagos Microplate which is a small separate plate on the rise just to the southeast of the triple junction Chiapas coast off Tapachula where Guatemala North America and Pacific join and small earthquakes occur weekly This is pushed eastward by the Cocos plate On the west coast of North America is another unstable triple junction offshore of Cape Mendocino To the south the San Andreas Fault a strike slip fault and transform plate boundary separates the Pacific Plate and the North American Plate To the north lies the Cascadia subduction zone where a section of the Juan de Fuca Plate called the Gorda Plate is being subducted under the North American Plate forming a trench T Another transform fault the Mendocino Fault F runs along the boundary between the Pacific Plate and the Gorda Plate Where the three intersect is the seismically active F F T Mendocino Triple Junction The Amurian Plate the Okhotsk Plate and the Philippine Sea Plate meet in Japan near Mount Fuji see Mount Fuji s Geology The Azores Triple Junction is a geologic triple junction where the boundaries of three tectonic plates intersect the North American Plate the Eurasian Plate and the African Plate R R R 10 The Boso Triple Junction offshore Japan is a T T T triple junction between the Okhotsk Plate Pacific Plate and Philippine Sea Plate The North Sea is located at the extinct triple junction of three former continental plates of the Palaeozoic era Avalonia Laurentia and Baltica 11 The South Greenland Triple Junction was an R R R triple junction where the Eurasian Greenland and North American plates diverged during the Paleogene 12 The Chile Triple Junction is where the South American Plate the Nazca Plate and the Antarctic Plate meet See also editSeafloor spreading Geological process at mid ocean ridgesReferences edit C M R Fowler Connie May Fowler Clarence Mary R Fowler 2005 The Solid Earth An Introduction to Global Geophysics Cambridge University Press p 26 ISBN 978 0 521 58409 8 McKenzie D P Morgan W J 11 October 1969 Evolution of Triple Junctions Nature 224 5215 125 133 Bibcode 1969Natur 224 125M doi 10 1038 224125a0 S2CID 4151329 S W Petters May 1978 Stratigraphic Evolution of the Benue Trough and Its Implications for the Upper Cretaceous Paleogeography of West Africa The Journal of Geology 86 3 311 322 Bibcode 1978JG 86 311P doi 10 1086 649693 JSTOR 30061985 S2CID 129346979 Boschman Lydian M Hinsbergen Douwe J J van 2016 07 01 On the enigmatic birth of the Pacific Plate within the Panthalassa Ocean Science Advances 2 7 e1600022 Bibcode 2016SciA 2E0022B doi 10 1126 sciadv 1600022 ISSN 2375 2548 PMC 5919776 PMID 29713683 Evolution of Triple Junctions McKenzie D P and Morgan W J Nature 224 125 1969 Evolution of Triple Junctions McKenzie D P and Morgan W J Nature 224 125 1969 York Derek 1973 Evolution of Triple Junctions Nature 244 5415 341 342 doi 10 1038 244341a0 ISSN 0028 0836 S2CID 4202607 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 27 Retrieved 2009 11 21 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Sauter D Mendel V Rommeveaux Jestin C 1997 Propagation of the Southwest Indian Ridge at the Rodrigues Triple Junction Journal Marine Geophysical Researches 19 6 553 567 Bibcode 1997MarGR 19 553S doi 10 1023 A 1004313109111 S2CID 127866775 Carracedo Juan Carlos Troll Valentin R 2021 01 01 North East Atlantic Islands The Macaronesian Archipelagos in Alderton David Elias Scott A eds Encyclopedia of Geology Second Edition Oxford Academic Press pp 674 699 doi 10 1016 b978 0 08 102908 4 00027 8 ISBN 978 0 08 102909 1 S2CID 226588940 retrieved 2021 03 18 White N Latin D 1993 Subsidence analyses from the North Sea triple junction PDF Journal of the Geological Society 150 3 473 488 Bibcode 1993JGSoc 150 473W doi 10 1144 gsjgs 150 3 0473 S2CID 129832756 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 08 12 Oakey Gordon N Stephenson Randell 2008 Crustal structure of the Innuitian region of Arctic Canada and Greenland from gravity modelling implications for the Palaeogene Eurekan orogen PDF Geophysical Journal International Royal Astronomical Society 173 3 1041 Bibcode 2008GeoJI 173 1039O doi 10 1111 j 1365 246X 2008 03784 x ISSN 0956 540X Oreskes Naomi ed 2003 Plate Tectonics an Insider s History of the Modern Theory of the Earth Westview Press ISBN 0 8133 4132 9 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Triple junction amp oldid 1202690958, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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