Ocean island basalt
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ocean_island_basalt an entity of type: Place
Der ozeanische Inselbasalt ist ein wichtiger Basalttypus, der auf Hochseeinseln im Platteninnern zu finden ist. Seine Entstehung wird gewöhnlich auf Hotspots im Erdmantel zurückgeführt.
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Basaltos de ilha oceânica (em inglês, Ocean Island Basalts, OIBs) são um tipo de basalto eruptado dentro dos oceanos, principalmente em regiões intraplaca. O vulcanismo de OIBs contrasta com os outros principais tipos de vulcanismo nas bacias oceânicas que ocorrem junto ao limite de placas tectônicas: basaltos de cadeia meso-oceânica (em inglês, Mid-Ocean Ridge Basalts, MORBs), eruptados em limites de placas divergentes; e vulcanismo de zonas de arco ou subducção, onde lavas são formadas em associação com subducção nos limites de placas convergentes. OIBs são eruptados, geralmente, em hotspots vulcânicos, que correspondem à localização na superfície de plumas mantélicas ascendentes.
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Les basaltes des îles océaniques, souvent désignés par le sigle OIB (ocean island basalts), sont les basaltes émis sur les îles volcaniques, loin des frontières des plaques tectoniques. Ces îles et ces basaltes sont souvent l'expression d'un point chaud.
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Ocean island basalt (OIB) is a volcanic rock, usually basaltic in composition, erupted in oceans away from tectonic plate boundaries. Although ocean island basaltic magma is mainly erupted as basalt lava, the basaltic magma is sometimes modified by igneous differentiation to produce a range of other volcanic rock types, for example, rhyolite in Iceland, and phonolite and trachyte at the intraplate volcano Fernando de Noronha. Unlike mid-ocean ridge basalts (MORBs), which erupt at spreading centers (divergent plate boundaries), and volcanic arc lavas, which erupt at subduction zones (convergent plate boundaries), ocean island basalts are the result of intraplate volcanism. However, some ocean island basalt locations coincide with plate boundaries like Iceland, which sits on top of a mid-oce
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Ozeanischer Inselbasalt
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Basalte d'île océanique
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Ocean island basalt
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Basaltos das ilhas oceânicas
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25302146
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1118662365
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Der ozeanische Inselbasalt ist ein wichtiger Basalttypus, der auf Hochseeinseln im Platteninnern zu finden ist. Seine Entstehung wird gewöhnlich auf Hotspots im Erdmantel zurückgeführt.
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Ocean island basalt (OIB) is a volcanic rock, usually basaltic in composition, erupted in oceans away from tectonic plate boundaries. Although ocean island basaltic magma is mainly erupted as basalt lava, the basaltic magma is sometimes modified by igneous differentiation to produce a range of other volcanic rock types, for example, rhyolite in Iceland, and phonolite and trachyte at the intraplate volcano Fernando de Noronha. Unlike mid-ocean ridge basalts (MORBs), which erupt at spreading centers (divergent plate boundaries), and volcanic arc lavas, which erupt at subduction zones (convergent plate boundaries), ocean island basalts are the result of intraplate volcanism. However, some ocean island basalt locations coincide with plate boundaries like Iceland, which sits on top of a mid-ocean ridge, and Samoa, which is located near a subduction zone. In the ocean basins, ocean island basalts form seamounts, and in some cases, enough material is erupted that the rock protrudes from the ocean and forms an island, like at Hawaii, Samoa, and Iceland. Over time, however, thermal subsidence and mass loss via subaerial erosion causes islands to become completely submarine seamounts or guyots. Many ocean island basalts erupt at volcanic hotspots, which are thought to be the surface expressions of melting of thermally buoyant, rising conduits of hot rock in the Earth's mantle, called mantle plumes. Mantle plume conduits may drift slowly, but Earth's tectonic plates drift more rapidly relative to mantle plumes. As a result, the relative motion of Earth's tectonic plates over mantle plumes produces age-progressive chains of volcanic islands and seamounts with the youngest, active volcanoes located above the axis of the mantle plume while older, inactive volcanoes are located progressively farther away from the plume conduit (see Figure 1). Hotspot chains can record tens of millions of years of continuous volcanic history; for example, the oldest seamounts in the Hawaiian–Emperor seamount chain are over 80 million years old. Not all ocean island basalts are the product of mantle plumes. There are thousands of seamounts that are not clearly associated with upwelling mantle plumes, and there are chains of seamounts that are not age progressive. Seamounts that are not clearly linked to a mantle plume indicate that regional mantle composition and tectonic activity may also play important roles in producing intraplate volcanism.
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Les basaltes des îles océaniques, souvent désignés par le sigle OIB (ocean island basalts), sont les basaltes émis sur les îles volcaniques, loin des frontières des plaques tectoniques. Ces îles et ces basaltes sont souvent l'expression d'un point chaud. Bien qu'ils représentent un volume total beaucoup plus petit que les MORB (émis au niveau des dorsales médio-océaniques), les OIB ont une composition beaucoup plus variable, aussi bien en termes d' que d'éléments en traces et de rapports isotopiques. Les OIB occupent toute la gamme allant des tholéites aux (en), mais ne comportent pas de termes calco-alcalins. Ils sont par ailleurs riches voire très riches en éléments incompatibles. Leur composition isotopique est également très variable, traduisant la contribution de plusieurs réservoirs mantelliques séparés les uns des autres depuis des centaines de millions d'années.
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Basaltos de ilha oceânica (em inglês, Ocean Island Basalts, OIBs) são um tipo de basalto eruptado dentro dos oceanos, principalmente em regiões intraplaca. O vulcanismo de OIBs contrasta com os outros principais tipos de vulcanismo nas bacias oceânicas que ocorrem junto ao limite de placas tectônicas: basaltos de cadeia meso-oceânica (em inglês, Mid-Ocean Ridge Basalts, MORBs), eruptados em limites de placas divergentes; e vulcanismo de zonas de arco ou subducção, onde lavas são formadas em associação com subducção nos limites de placas convergentes. OIBs são eruptados, geralmente, em hotspots vulcânicos, que correspondem à localização na superfície de plumas mantélicas ascendentes.
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23462