Low-degree mantle melting controls the deep seismicity and explosive volcanism of the Gakkel Ridge

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Abstract

The world’s strongest known spreading-related seismicity swarm occurred in 1999 in a segment of the Gakkel Ridge located at 85°E as a consequence of an effusive-explosive submarine volcanic eruption. The data of a seismic network deployed on ice floes were used to locate hundreds of local earthquakes down to ∼25 km depth and to build a seismic tomography model under the volcanic area. Here we show the seismicity and the distribution of seismic velocities together with the 3D magmatic-thermomechanical numerical model, which demonstrate how a magma reservoir under the Gakkel Ridge may form, rise and trigger volcanic eruptions in the rift valley. The ultraslow spreading rates with low mantle potential temperatures appear to be a critical factor in the production of volatile-rich, low-degree mantle melts that are focused toward the magma reservoirs within narrow magmatic sections. The degassing of these melts is the main cause of the explosive submarine eruptions.

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Koulakov, I., Schlindwein, V., Liu, M., Gerya, T., Jakovlev, A., & Ivanov, A. (2022). Low-degree mantle melting controls the deep seismicity and explosive volcanism of the Gakkel Ridge. Nature Communications, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-30797-4

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