Hotspot (geology)
In geology, hotspots are volcanic locales thought to be fed by underlying mantle that is anomalously hot compared with the surrounding mantle. Examples include the Hawaii, Iceland, and Yellowstone hotspots. A hotspot's position on the Earth's surface is independent of tectonic plate boundaries, and so hotspots may create a chain of volcanoes as the plates move above them.
There are two hypotheses that attempt to explain their origins. One suggests that hotspots are due to mantle plumes that rise as thermal diapirs from the core–mantle boundary. The alternative plate theory is that the mantle source beneath a hotspot is not anomalously hot, rather the crust above is unusually weak or thin, so that lithospheric extension permits the passive rising of melt from shallow depths.
Origin
The origins of the concept of hotspots lie in the work of J. Tuzo Wilson, who postulated in 1963 that the formation of the Hawaiian Islands resulted from the slow movement of a tectonic plate across a hot region beneath the surface. It was later postulated that hotspots are fed by streams of hot mantle rising from the Earth's core–mantle boundary in a structure called a mantle plume. Whether or not such mantle plumes exist has been the subject of a major controversy in Earth science, but seismic images consistent with evolving theory now exist.At any place where volcanism is not linked to a constructive or destructive plate margin, the concept of a hotspot has been used to explain its origin. A review article by Courtillot et al. listing possible hotspots makes a distinction between primary hotspots coming from deep within the mantle and secondary hotspots derived from mantle plumes. The primary hotspots originate from the core/mantle boundary and create large volcanic provinces with linear tracks. The secondary hotspots originate at the upper/lower mantle boundary, and do not form large volcanic provinces, but island chains. Other potential hotspots are the result of shallow mantle material surfacing in areas of lithospheric break-up caused by tension and are thus a very different type of volcanism.
Estimates for the number of hotspots postulated to be fed by mantle plumes have ranged from about 20 to several thousand, with most geologists considering a few dozen to exist. Hawaii, Réunion, Yellowstone, Galápagos, and Iceland are some of the most active volcanic regions to which the hypothesis is applied. The plumes imaged to date vary widely in width and other characteristics, and are tilted, being not the simple, relatively narrow and purely thermal plumes many expected. Only one, Yellowstone, has as yet been consistently modelled and imaged from deep mantle to surface.
Composition
Most hotspot volcanoes are basaltic. As a result, they are less explosive than subduction zone volcanoes, in which water is trapped under the overriding plate. Where hotspots occur in continental regions, basaltic magma rises through the continental crust, which melts to form rhyolites. These rhyolites can form violent eruptions. For example, the Yellowstone Caldera was formed by some of the most powerful volcanic explosions in geologic history. However, when the rhyolite is completely erupted, it may be followed by eruptions of basaltic magma rising through the same lithospheric fissures. An example of this activity is the Ilgachuz Range in British Columbia, which was created by an early complex series of trachyte and rhyolite eruptions, and late extrusion of a sequence of basaltic lava flows.The hotspot hypothesis is now closely linked to the mantle plume hypothesis. The detailed compositional studies now possible on hotspot basalts have allowed linkage of samples over the wider areas often implicate in the later hypothesis, and its seismic imaging developments.
Contrast with subduction zone island arcs
Hotspot volcanoes are considered to have a fundamentally different origin from island arc volcanoes. The latter form over subduction zones, at converging plate boundaries. When one oceanic plate meets another, the denser plate is forced downward into a deep ocean trench. This plate, as it is subducted, releases water into the base of the over-riding plate, and this water mixes with the rock, thus changing its composition causing some rock to melt and rise. It is this that fuels a chain of volcanoes, such as the Aleutian Islands, near Alaska.Hotspot volcanic chains
The joint mantle plume/hotspot hypothesis originally envisaged the feeder structures to be fixed relative to one another, with the continents and seafloor drifting overhead. The hypothesis thus predicts that time-progressive chains of volcanoes are developed on the surface. Examples include Yellowstone, which lies at the end of a chain of extinct calderas, which become progressively older to the west. Another example is the Hawaiian archipelago, where islands become progressively older and more deeply eroded to the northwest.Geologists have tried to use hotspot volcanic chains to track the movement of the Earth's tectonic plates. This effort has been vexed by the lack of very long chains, by the fact that many are not time-progressive and by the fact that hotspots do not appear to be fixed relative to one another. That mantle plumes are much more complex than originally hypothesised and move independently of each other and plates is now used to explain such observations.
In 2020, Wei et al. used seismic tomography to detect the oceanic plateau, formed about 100 million years ago by the hypothesized mantle plume head of the Hawaii-Emperor seamount chain, now subducted to a depth of 800 km under eastern Siberia.
Postulated hotspot volcano chains
- Hawaiian–Emperor seamount chain
- Louisville Ridge
- Walvis Ridge
- Kodiak–Bowie Seamount chain
- Cobb–Eickelberg Seamount chain
- New England Seamounts
- Anahim Volcanic Belt
- Mackenzie dike swarm
- Great Meteor hotspot track
- St. Helena Seamount Chain–Cameroon Volcanic Line
- Southern Mascarene Plateau–Chagos-Maldives-Laccadive Ridge
- Ninety East Ridge
- Tuamotu–Line Island chain
- Austral–Gilbert–Marshall chain
- Juan Fernández Ridge
- Tasmantid Seamount Chain
- Canary Islands
- Cape Verde
List of volcanic regions postulated to be hotspots
Eurasian plate
- Eifel hotspot
- *, w= 1 az= 082° ±8° rate= 12 ±2 mm/yr
- Iceland hotspot
- *
- ** Eurasian Plate, w= 0.8 az= 075° ±10° rate= 5 ±3 mm/yr
- ** North American Plate, w= 0.8 az= 287° ±10° rate= 15 ±5 mm/yr
- * Possibly related to the North Atlantic continental rifting, Greenland.
- Azores hotspot
- *
- ** Eurasian Plate, w= 0.5 az= 110° ±12°
- ** North American Plate, w= 0.3 az= 280° ±15°
- Jan Mayen hotspot
- *
- Hainan hotspot
- *, az= 000° ±15°
African plate
- Mount Etna
- *
- Hoggar hotspot
- *, w= 0.3 az= 046° ±12°
- Tibesti hotspot
- *, w= 0.2 az= 030° ±15°
- Jebel Marra/Darfur hotspot
- *, w= 0.5 az= 045° ±8°
- Afar hotspot
- *, w= 0.2 az= 030° ±15° rate= 16 ±8 mm/yr
- * Possibly related to the Afar triple junction, 30 Ma.
- Cameroon hotspot
- *, w= 0.3 az= 032° ±3° rate= 15 ±5 mm/yr
- Madeira hotspot
- *, w= 0.3 az= 055° ±15° rate= 8 ±3 mm/yr
- Canary hotspot
- *, w= 1 az= 094° ±8° rate= 20 ±4 mm/yr
- New England/Great Meteor hotspot
- *, w= 0.8 az= 040° ±10°
- Cape Verde hotspot
- *, w= 0.2 az= 060° ±30°
- Sierra Leone hotspot
- St. Helena hotspot
- *, w= 1 az= 078° ±5° rate= 20 ±3 mm/yr
- Gough hotspot, at 40°19' S 9°56' W.
- *, w= 0.8 az= 079° ±5° rate= 18 ±3 mm/yr
- Tristan hotspot, at 37°07′ S 12°17′ W.
- *
- Vema hotspot, at 31°38' S 8°20' E.
- *
- * Related maybe to the Paraná and Etendeka traps through the Walvis Ridge.
- Discovery hotspot
- *, w= 1 az= 068° ±3°
- Bouvet hotspot
- *
- Shona/Meteor hotspot
- *, w= 0.3 az= 074° ±6°
- Réunion hotspot
- *, w= 0.8 az= 047° ±10° rate= 40 ±10 mm/yr
- * Possibly related to the Deccan Traps
- Comoros hotspot
- *, w= 0.5 az=118 ±10° rate=35 ±10 mm/yr
Antarctic plate
- Marion hotspot
- *, w= 0.5 az= 080° ±12°
- Crozet hotspot
- *, w= 0.8 az= 109° ±10° rate= 25 ±13 mm/yr
- * Possibly related to the Karoo-Ferrar geologic province
- Kerguelen hotspot
- *, w= 0.2 az= 050° ±30° rate= 3 ±1 mm/yr
- * Related to the Kerguelen Plateau
- ** Heard hotspot, possibly part of Kerguelen hotspot
- **, w= 0.2 az= 030° ±20°
- * Île Saint-Paul and Île Amsterdam could be part of the Kerguelen hotspot trail
- Balleny hotspot
- *, w= 0.2 az= 325° ±7°
- Erebus hotspot
- *
South American plate
- Trindade/Martin Vaz hotspot
- *, w= 1 az= 264° ±5°
- Fernando hotspot
- *, w= 1 az= 266° ±7°
- * Possibly related to the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province
- Ascension hotspot
- *
North American plate
- Bermuda hotspot
- *, w= 0.3 az= 260° ±15°
- Yellowstone hotspot
- *, w= 0.8 az= 235° ±5° rate= 26 ±5 mm/yr
- * Possibly related to the Columbia River Basalt Group.
- Raton hotspot
- *, w= 1 az= 240°±4° rate= 30 ±20 mm/yr
- Anahim hotspot
- *
Australian plate
- Lord Howe hotspot
- *, w= 0.8 az= 351° ±10°
- Tasmantid hotspot
- *, w= 0.8 az= 007° ±5° rate= 63 ±5 mm/yr
- East Australia hotspot
- *, w= 0.3 az= 000° ±15° rate= 65 ±3 mm/yr
Nazca plate
- Juan Fernández hotspot
- *, w= 1 az= 084° ±3° rate= 80 ±20 mm/yr
- San Felix hotspot
- *, w= 0.3 az= 083° ±8°
- Easter hotspot
- *, w= 1 az= 087° ±3° rate= 95 ±5 mm/yr
- Galápagos hotspot
- *
- ** Nazca Plate, w= 1 az= 096° ±5° rate= 55 ±8 mm/yr
- ** Cocos Plate, w= 0.5 az= 045° ±6°
- * Possibly related to the Caribbean large igneous province.