Title :
The Australian-Antarctic Discordance: pressurized vs. non-pressurized ridge system
Author :
Leybourne, Bruce A. ; Adams, Michael B.
Author_Institution :
Stennis Space Center, MS, USA
Abstract :
The axial morphology of the Southeast Indian Ridge (SEIR) between Australia and Antarctica changes dramatically along 120°E to 127°E. At approximately 127°E the ridge changes character along with a difference in water depth of about 1 km. Eastward it changes from a Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR) type cross-section to an East-Pacific Rise (EPR) type cross-section. The MAR profiles a bathymetric low (5- to 20-km wide, 500- to 1500-m-deep rift valley), while the EPR profiles a bathymetric high (10-km-wide, 500-m-high ridge). The MAR type extends westward to approximately 100°E and is called the Australian-Antarctic Discordance (AAD). This geomorphology is unique globally. The MAR is considered a slow-spreading center and like the AAD has similar segmentation characteristics of non-transform (small, <10 km) and transform discontinuous partitions of the ridge at 40 to 60 km. In contrast, the SEIR east of the AAD has segmentation characteristics of a fast-spreading center similar to the EPR. There are no transforms until 138°E, and westward propagating rifts are the only non-transform discontinuities
Keywords :
oceanic crust; tectonics; Australian-Antarctic Discordance; Indian Ocean; SEIR; Southeast Indian Ridge; Southern Ocean; axial morphology; bathymetric low; cross-section; midocean ridge; nonpressurized ridge system; oceanic crust; plate tectonics; pressurized ridge system; rift valley; segmentation; water depth; Antarctica; Atmosphere; Australia; Convergence; Geophysics; Morphology; Oceanographic techniques; Paramagnetic resonance; Surges; Visualization;
Conference_Titel :
OCEANS 2000 MTS/IEEE Conference and Exhibition
Conference_Location :
Providence, RI
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-6551-8
DOI :
10.1109/OCEANS.2000.882231