Insights into the Yellowstone Hotspot
Boulder, Colo., USA: The Yellowstone hotspot is well known for generating
supereruptions in the geologic past that are far more explosive than
historic examples. The origin and sustained longevity of the hotspot is
less understood but is focused on two competing models, where the ascent of
hot mantle is derived from either a deep-seated mantle plume or a shallow
mantle source.
In their study published this month in GSA Today, Vic Camp and Ray
Wells use an integrated database that supports the idea of a deep
mantle-plume origin for the Yellowstone hotspot with a robust history of
magmatism that extends to at least 56 million years ago, far older than
previously thought. In this scenario, hotspot volcanism began offshore and
migrated to the east-northeast across northeastern California, northern
Nevada, southeastern Oregon, and southern Idaho to its current position at
Yellowstone National Park.
This long-lived path of hotspot migration is marked by a belt of aligned
volcanic provinces that display progressively younger ages to the
east-northeast, similar to the age progression produced by southwest motion
of the North America plate over a fixed Yellowstone hotspot.
ARTICLE
The Case for a Long-Lived and Robust Yellowstone Hotspot
Victor E. Camp, San Diego State University, Dept. of Geological Sciences,
5500 Campanile Drive, San Diego, California 92182, USA, vcamp@sdsu.edu
Ray E. Wells, U.S. Geological Survey, 2130 SW 5th Street, Portland, Oregon
97201, USA
GSA Today
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