"Missing links" for the long-lived Macdonald and Arago hotspots, South Pacific Ocean
2020
The Cook-Austral volcanic lineament extends from Macdonald Seamount (east) 18 to Aitutaki Island (west) in the South Pacific Ocean and consists of hotspot-related volcanic islands, seamounts, and atolls. The Cook-Australs [[lineament, or chain? Or Cook and Austal Islands?]] have been characterized as multiple overlapping, ageprogressive hotspot tracks generated by at least two mantle plumes, including the and Macdonald plumes, which have fed volcano construction for ~20 m.y. The Arago and Macdonald hotspot tracks are argued to have been active for at least 70 m.y. and to
extend northwest of the Cook-Australs into the Cretaceous-aged Tuvalu-Gilbert and Tokelau Island chains, respectively. Large gaps in sampling exist along the predicted hotspot tracks, complicating efforts seeking to show that the Arago and Macdonald hotspots have been continuous, long-lived sources of hotspot volcanism back into the Cretaceous. We present new major- and trace-element concentrations and radiogenic isotopes for three seamounts (Moki, Malulu, Dino) and one atoll (Rose), and new clinopyroxene 40Ar/39 Ar ages for Rose (24.81 ± 1.02 Ma) and Moki (44.53 ± 10.05 Ma).
All volcanoes are located in the poorly sampled region between the younger Cook Austral and the older, Cretaceous portions of the Arago and Macdonald hotspot tracks. Absolute plate motion modeling indicates that the Rose and Moki volcanoes lie on or near the reconstructed traces of the Arago and Macdonald hotspots, respectively, and the 40Ar/39 Ar ages for Rose and Moki align with the predicted age progression for the Arago (Rose) and Macdonald (Moki) hotspots, thereby linking the younger Cook-Austral and older Cretaceous portions of the long-lived (>70 m.y.) Arago and Macdonald hotspot tracks.
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