Abstract
Hydrothermal megaplumes are huge volumes of anomalously warm water that are located up to 1,000 metres above the sea floor and appear to be generated at mid-ocean ridges. Since their discovery in 1986, there has been considerable debate concerning their origin. A theoretical model is used to argue that the cooling of pillow basalts, which are erupted at ∼1,200 °C into sea water and are the most common form of submarine volcanic activity, is responsible for the megaplume formation.
Published Version
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