Abstract

A deeply-towed instrument package was used in a detailed survey of the crest of the East Pacific Rise (EPR) near 3°25′S, where the Pacific and Nazca plates are separating at 152 mm/yr. A single 90 km-long traverse of the rise crest extends near-bottom observations onto the rise flanks. A ridge at the spreading axis is defined by its steep regional slopes, probably caused by rapid crustal contraction as the spreading magma chamber freezes, rather than by outward-facing fault scarps. It can be divided into a marginal horst-and-graben zone with low (<50 m), symmetric fault blocks, and a 2 km-wide elongate axial shield volcano that is unfaulted except for a narrow crestal rift zone. This has a summit graben (10–35 m deep) probably formed by caldera collapse, and narrow pillow basalt walls built over vent fissures. Small, low (<50 m) volcanic peaks occur on the shield volcano and the horst-and-graben zone, and some may have been built away from the spreading axis. Major plate-building lava flows issue from the crestal rift zone and flow an average of 500 m down the sides of the volcano. The marginal horst-and-graben zone results from tensional faulting of a thin crust of lava, and evolves by progressive shearing on inclined fault planes. Crustal extension continues at least as far as 20 km from the axis, and the large, long fault blocks formed in thicker crust beyond the subaxial magma chamber develop into abyssal hills. Pelagic sedimentation, at a maximum rate of 22 m/106 years, gradually infills open fissures and smooths the small-scale roughness of the fault blocks. Off-axis volcanism has also resulted in smoother crust, and built seamounts. Comparison of the EPR at 3°25′S with the Famous Rift and Galapagos Rift reveals a similarity in the processes and small-scale landforms at fast, medium and slow-spreading ridges. There are significant differences in the medium-scale landforms, probably because plate-boundary volcanic and tectonic processes act on crust of very different strength, thickness, and age.

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