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Details of Award

NERC Reference : NE/X000060/1

Mantle dynamics beneath the North Atlantic region from integrated seismic imaging using new regional seafloor data and global datasets

Grant Award

Principal Investigator:
Professor S Lebedev, University of Cambridge, Earth Sciences
Co-Investigator:
Dr S Cottaar, University of Cambridge, Earth Sciences
Co-Investigator:
Professor T Nissen-Meyer, University of Oxford, Earth Sciences
Co-Investigator:
Professor J Wookey, University of Bristol, Earth Sciences
Science Area:
Earth
Marine
Overall Classification:
Panel A
ENRIs:
Environmental Risks and Hazards
Global Change
Natural Resource Management
Science Topics:
Continental margins
Mantle processes
Seismic waves
Earth Resources
Geohazards
Earthquakes
Magmatism
Seismicity
Tectonic systems
Volcanic eruptions
Deep mantle processes
Geodynamics
Igneous provinces
Lithosphere
Magmatism
Mantle convection
Mantle plumes
Seismic structure
Seismicity
Mantle & Core Processes
Intraplate volcanism
Large igneous provinces
Asthenospheric processes
Tectonic Processes
Lithospheric processes
Mantle convection
Mantle plumes
Mantle processes
Seismicity
Volcanic processes
Volcanic Processes
Flood basalts
Igneous provinces
Mantle plumes
Abstract:
Mantle plumes are enigmatic hot upwelling rising from instabilities at Earth's core-mantle boundary. When approaching the surface, they are thought to cause the emplacement of Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs), whose catastrophic volcanism led to mass extinctions through Earth history. Continued ascent of hot material within the plumes' tails is believed to create volcanic hotspots, with continual eruptions over tens of m.y. or more, such as in Iceland. Mantle plumes have been difficult to image seismically, and LIP magmatism is often varied chemically and scattered over thousands of km. This prompted alternative, no-plume explanations for LIP and hotspot volcanism. The properties of mantle plumes (starting with their existence, according to sections of the community) and whether and how they cause LIPs are outstanding, first-order questions of Earth science. The Iceland Plume is a type example of the phenomenon and a subject of long-standing debate. It is thought to cause Iceland's present volcanic activity and the NE Atlantic Ocean's anomalously shallow (per seafloor age) bathymetry. It may also have created the N. Atlantic Igneous Province (NAIP), its ~60 m.y. old volcanic areas dispersed from Britain to western Greenland. Geophysical and petrological data indicate anomalously hot sub-lithospheric mantle below Iceland, and the Iceland and NAIP basalts show isotopic ratios with deep-mantle signatures, consistent with a plume origin. The Iceland Plume was a target of many seismic imaging studies, but the gap in station coverage around Iceland (no stations on the seafloor) translated into major gaps in the data sampling of the mantle. Available seismic models show frustratingly low mutual consistency. The vertical and lateral mantle flow below NE Atlantic is largely unknown. In 2018-20, the project SEA-SEIS, led by the PI, operated Ocean-Bottom Seismometers (OBS) across a large part of NE Atlantic, filling much of the sampling gap. SEA-SEIS' own focus was on structure and seismicity of Ireland's offshore, but the network was designed to also image the Iceland Plume. The proposed project capitalises on the exceptional opportunity of using unique new data (scheduled for public release at SEA-SEIS' end) at no data-collection cost. This project's goal is a breakthrough in our understanding of the structure and dynamics of the Iceland Plume and of how it could cause the NAIP magmatism. This will be achieved by combining the new data with all other relevant seismic data available and applying a suite of complementary imaging methods that will resolve plume structure and plume-induced flow. Seismic tomography with new and all pre-existing data will yield a detailed 3D image of the region's upper and lower mantle. We will combine waveform inversion of surface and regional S waves (sampling the upper mantle) with multi-frequency, teleseismic travel-time tomography (also sampling the lower mantle). The thickness and, by inference, temperature of the mantle transition zone (TZ, ~410-660 km depths) will be mapped using receiver functions (RF). Recent maps show intriguing small-scale variations beneath NE Atlantic but a large gap in the key area between Iceland and Britain. We will fill this gap and expect to learn where and how the hot plume rises through the TZ. Waveform tomography and interstation surface-wave measurements will constrain a lithospheric-thickness map and show whether or not thin-lithosphere channels connect Iceland with NAIP sites to the east. Seismic anisotropy indicates fabric created by flow of the rock at depth. It will be mapped with complementary shear-wave-splitting and surface-wave methods and show current directions of convective flow in the NE Atlantic upper mantle. The combined, integrated evidence will illuminate the Iceland Plume and convective currents it creates in unprecedented detail. It will bring important new insights into the mechanisms of intraplate volcanism globally.
Period of Award:
1 May 2023 - 30 Apr 2026
Value:
£635,879
Authorised funds only
NERC Reference:
NE/X000060/1
Grant Stage:
Awaiting Event/Action
Scheme:
Standard Grant FEC
Grant Status:
Active
Programme:
Standard Grant

This grant award has a total value of £635,879  

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FDAB - Financial Details (Award breakdown by headings)

DI - Other CostsIndirect - Indirect CostsDA - InvestigatorsDA - Estate CostsDI - StaffDA - Other Directly AllocatedDI - T&S
£21,856£246,349£67,616£81,441£199,984£5,267£13,366

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