Title of article :
Geology of ascension Island, South Atlantic Ocean
Author/Authors :
Dennis L. Nielson، نويسنده , , Bruce S. Sibbett، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1996
Abstract :
Ascension Island is the exposed part of a large volcano located
about 80 km west of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge axis in the northern South Atlantic
Ocean. The volcanic rocks of the island form an alkaline suite with a compositional
range of basalt-hawaiite-mugearite-benmoreite-trachyte-rhyolite.
Trachyte and rhyolite compose approximately 14% of surface exposures.
Petrochemical studies by other investigators have shown that the igneous suite
was formed by fractional crystallization. The abundance of felsic volcanic rocks
and the presence of granite and syenite blocks in pyroclastic deposits suggest
that felsic magma chambers have formed and could provide the heat for a
convective hydrothermal system. The felsic volcanic rocks form two eruptive
centers that may be contemporaneous. The oldest rocks exposed on the surface
are rhyolite with K-Ar ages of approximately one million years. Faults mapped
on the island have four principal trends and appear to be related to regional
structures that are apparent on the bathymetry of the island pedestal. Copyright
(~ 1996 CNR. Published by Elsevier Science Ltd.
Keywords :
Ascension Island , alkaline volcanic rocks , normal faults , pyroclasticrocks , Atlantic Ocean
Journal title :
Geothermics
Journal title :
Geothermics