Abstract

The bend in the Hawaiian-Emperor chain is the best example of a change in plate motion recorded in a fixed-hotspot frame of reference. Alternatively, the bend might record primarily differences in motion of the Hawaiian hotspot relative to the Pacific lithosphere. New paleomagnetic data from the Emperor chain support the latter view. Althouth the rate of motion is difficult to constrain because of uncertainties posed by true polar wander and limited sampling of the chain, the best available paleomagnetic data suggest Pacific hotspots may have moved at rates comparable to those of lithospheric plates (> 30 mm yr −1) in late Cretaceous to early Tertiary times (81-43 Ma). If correct, this requires a major change in how we view mantle dynamics and the history of plate motions. In the early to mid-Cretaceous (128-95 Ma), hotspots in the Atlantic moved at similar rates. These episodes during which groups of hotspots appear to move rapidly are separated by times of much slower motion, such as the past 5 m.y.

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