1932

Abstract

By 1968, J. Tuzo Wilson had identified three basic elements of geodynamics: plate tectonics, mantle plumes of deep origin, and the Wilson Cycle of ocean opening and closing, which provides evidence of plate tectonic behavior in times before quantifiable plate rotations. My pre-1968 experience disposed me to try to play a part in testing these ideas. Most recently, with colleagues, I have been able to show that deep-seated plumes of the past ∼5.5 × 108 years have risen only from narrow plume generation zones (PGZs) at the core-mantle boundary (CMB) mostly on the edges of two Large Low Shear wave Velocity Provinces (LLSVPs) that have been stable, antipodal, and equatorial in their present positions for hundreds of millions of years and perhaps much longer. A need now is to develop an understanding of Earth that embodies plate tectonics, deeply subducted slabs, and stable LLSVPs with plumes that rise from PGZs on the CMB.

Loading

Article metrics loading...

/content/journals/10.1146/annurev-earth-040809-152521
2011-05-30
2024-04-24
Loading full text...

Full text loading...

/deliver/fulltext/earth/39/1/annurev-earth-040809-152521.html?itemId=/content/journals/10.1146/annurev-earth-040809-152521&mimeType=html&fmt=ahah

Literature Cited

  1. Altamira-Areyan A. 2009. The ribbon continent of northwestern South America PhD dissertation Univ. Houst. Tex.:193
  2. Alvarez LW, Alvarez W, Asaro F, Michel HV. 1980. Extraterrestrial cause for the Cretaceous-Tertiary extinction: experimental results and theoretical interpretation. Science 208:44481095–108 [Google Scholar]
  3. Ashwal LD. 1993. Anorthosites. Minerals Rocks Ser. No. 21 Berlin: Springer-Verlag422 [Google Scholar]
  4. Ashwal LD, Armstrong RA, Roberts RJ, Schmitz MD, Corfu F. et al. 2007. Geochronology of zircon megacrysts from nepheline-bearing gneisses as constraints on tectonic setting: implications for resetting of the U-Pb and Lu-Hf isotopic systems. Contrib. Mineral. Petrol. 153:4389–403 [Google Scholar]
  5. Becker T, Boschi L. 2002. A comparison of tomographic and geodynamic mantle models. Geochem. Geophys. Geosys. 3:2001GC000168 [Google Scholar]
  6. Brown GF, Coleman RG. 1972. The tectonic framework of the Arabian peninsula. Proc. Int. Geol. Congr., 24th, Montreal300–5 Ottowa, Can.: IUGS [Google Scholar]
  7. Burke K. 1969. Seismic areas of the Guinea Coast where Atlantic fracture zones reach Africa. Nature 222:655–57 [Google Scholar]
  8. Burke K. 1971. Recent faulting near the Volta dam. Nature 231:439–40 [Google Scholar]
  9. Burke K. 1972. Longshore drift, submarine canyons, and submarine fans in development of the Niger Delta. AAPG Bull. 56:1975–83 [Google Scholar]
  10. Burke K. 1976. The Chad Basin: an active intra-continental basin. Tectonophysics 36:198–206 [Google Scholar]
  11. Burke K. 1977. Aulacogens and continental breakup. Annu. Rev. Earth Planet. Sci. 5:371–96 [Google Scholar]
  12. Burke K. 1988. Tectonic evolution of the Caribbean. Annu. Rev. Earth Planet. Sci. 16:201–30 [Google Scholar]
  13. Burke K. 1996. The African plate. S. Afr. J. Geol. 99:339–409 [Google Scholar]
  14. Burke K. 2007. Dancing continents. Science 318:1385 [Google Scholar]
  15. Burke K, Dessauvagie TFJ, Whiteman AJ. 1971. Opening of the Gulf of Guinea and the geological history of the Benue depression and Niger delta. Nat. Phys. Sci. 233:51–55 [Google Scholar]
  16. Burke K, Dewey JF. 1972. Orogeny in Africa. Proc. Conf. Afr. Geol., Dec. 1970, Ibadan, Nigeria TFJ Dessauvagie, AJ Whiteman 583–608 Ibadan: Univ. Ib. [Google Scholar]
  17. Burke K, Dewey JF. 1973. Plume-generated triple junctions: key indicators in applying plate tectonics to old rocks. J. Geol. 81:406–33 [Google Scholar]
  18. Burke K, Dewey JF. 1974. Hot spots and continental breakup: implications for collisional orogeny. Geology 2:57–60 [Google Scholar]
  19. Burke K, Dewey JF, Kidd WSF. 1976. Dominance of horizontal movements, arc and microcontinental collisions during the later permobile regime. The Early History of the Earth BF Windley 113–30 Hoboken, NJ: Wiley [Google Scholar]
  20. Burke K, Dewey JF, Kidd WSF. 1977. World distribution of sutures—the sites of former oceans. Tectonophysics 40:69–99 [Google Scholar]
  21. Burke K, Fox PJ, Şengör AMC. 1978. Buoyant ocean floor and the evolution of the Caribbean. J. Geophys. Res. 83:3949–54 [Google Scholar]
  22. Burke K, Gunnell Y. 2008. The African erosion surface: a continental-scale synthesis of geomorphology, tectonics, and environmental change over the past 180 million years. Geol. Soc. Am. Mem. 201:1–66 [Google Scholar]
  23. Burke K, Khan SD, Mart RW. 2008a. Grenville Province and Monteregian carbonatite and nepheline syenite distribution related to rifting, collision, and plume passage. Geology 26:12983–86 [Google Scholar]
  24. Burke K, Kidd WSF. 1978. Were Archean continental geothermal gradients much steeper than those of today?. Nature 272:240–41 [Google Scholar]
  25. Burke K, Kidd WSF, Kusky TM. 1986. Archean foreland basin tectonics in the Witwatersrand, South Africa. Tectonics 5:439–56 [Google Scholar]
  26. Burke K, Kidd WSF, Wilson JT. 1973a. Plumes and concentric plume traces of the Eurasian plate. Nat. Phys. Sci. 241:128–29 [Google Scholar]
  27. Burke K, Kidd WSF, Wilson JT. 1973b. Relative and latitudinal motion of Atlantic hot spots. Nature 245:133–37 [Google Scholar]
  28. Burke K, MacGregor DS, Cameron NR. 2003. Africa's petroleum systems: four tectonic ‘Aces’ in the past 600 million years. Geol. Soc. Lond. Spec. Publ. 207:21–60 [Google Scholar]
  29. Burke K, Şengör AMC. 1985. Tectonic escape in the evolution of the continental crust. Geodyn. Ser. 14:41–53 [Google Scholar]
  30. Burke K, Steinberger B, Torsvik TH, Smethurst MA. 2008b. Plume Generation Zones at the margins of Large Low Shear Velocity provinces on the core-mantle boundary. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 265:49–60 [Google Scholar]
  31. Burke K, Torsvik TH. 2004. Derivation of Large Igneous provinces of the past 200 million years from long-term heterogeneities in the deep mantle. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 227:531–38 [Google Scholar]
  32. Burke K, Torsvik TH, Smethurst MA, Steinberger B, Werner SC. 2008c. Possible analogous long-term histories of the terrestrial geoid and the Martian areoid. Proc. Lunar Planet. Sci. Conf., 39th, Houst., Tex. (Abstr.)
  33. Burke K, Whiteman AJ. 1973. Uplift, rifting and the breakup of Africa. Implications of Continental Drift to the Earth Sciences DH Tarling, SK Runcorn 2735–45 London: Academic [Google Scholar]
  34. Burke K, Wilson JT. 1972. Is the African plate stationary?. Nature 239:387–90 [Google Scholar]
  35. Burke K, Wilson JT. 1976. Hot spots on the earth's surface. See Wilson 1976 46–60
  36. Centeno-Garcia E, Guerrero-Suastegui M, Talavera-Mendoza. 2008. The Guerrero Composite Terrane of western Mexico: collision and subsequent rifting in a supra-subduction zone. Geol. Soc. Am. Spec. Pap. 436:279–308 [Google Scholar]
  37. Chubb LJ, Burke K. 1963. Age of the Jamaican granodiorite. Geol. Mag. 100:524–32 [Google Scholar]
  38. Cloos H. 1939. Hebung-Spaltung-Vulkanismus. Geol. Rundsch. 30:405–527 [Google Scholar]
  39. Condie KC, O'Neill C, Aster RC. 2009. Evidence and implications for a widespread magmatic shutdown for 250 My on Earth. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 282:294–98 [Google Scholar]
  40. Dalmayrac B, Molnar P. 1981. Parallel thrust and normal faulting in Peru and constraints on the state of stress. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 55:3473–81 [Google Scholar]
  41. Davaille A, Stutzmann E, Silveira G, Besse J, Courtillot V. 2005. Convective patterns under the Indo-Atlantic “box.”. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 239:3–4233–52 [Google Scholar]
  42. Dewey JF. 1980. Episodicity, sequence and style at convergent plate boundaries. Geol. Assoc. Can. Spec. Pap. 20:553–73 [Google Scholar]
  43. Dewey JF, Burke K. 1973. Tibetan, Variscan, and Precambrian basement reactivation: products of continental collision. J. Geol. 81:683–92 [Google Scholar]
  44. de Wit MJ, Ashwal LD. 1997. Greenstone Belts Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press
  45. Dziewonski AM. 1984. Mapping the lower mantle: determination of lateral heterogeneity in P velocity up to degree and order 6. J. Geophys. Res. 89:5929–52 [Google Scholar]
  46. Dziewonski AM, Lekic V, Romanowicz BA. 2010. Mantle Anchor Structure: an argument for bottom up tectonics. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 299:69–79 [Google Scholar]
  47. Eldholm O, Coffin MF. 2000. Large igneous provinces and plate tectonics. The History and Dynamics of Global Plate Motions MA Richards, RG Gordon, RD Van der Hilst 309–21 Washington, DC: AGU [Google Scholar]
  48. England P, Houseman G. 1984. On the geodynamic setting of kimberlite genesis. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 67:109–22 [Google Scholar]
  49. Garnero EJ, Lay T, McNamara A. 2007. Implications of lower-mantle structural heterogeneity for the existence and nature of whole-mantle plumes. Geol. Soc. Am. Spec. Pap. 430:79–101 [Google Scholar]
  50. Grippi J, Burke K. 1980. Submarine-canyon complex among Cretaceous island-arc sediments, western Jamaica. Geol. Soc. Am. Bull. 91:179–84 [Google Scholar]
  51. Grove TL, Parman SW. 2004. Thermal evolution of the Earth as recorded by komatiites. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 219:3–4173–87 [Google Scholar]
  52. Guiraud R, Bosworth W. 1997. Senonian basin inversion and rejuvenation of rifting in Africa and Arabia: synthesis and implications to plate-scale tectonics. Tectonophysics 282:39–82 [Google Scholar]
  53. Hager BH. 1984. Subducted slabs and the geoid: constraints on mantle rheology and flow. J. Geophys. Res. 89:B76003–15 [Google Scholar]
  54. Harrison TM. 2009. The Hadean crust: evidence from >4 Ga zircons. Annu. Rev. Earth Planet. Sci. 37:479–505 [Google Scholar]
  55. Hildebrand RS. 2009. Did westward subduction cause Cretaceous-Tertiary orogeny in the North American Cordillera?. Geol. Soc. Am. Spec. Pap. 457:1–71 [Google Scholar]
  56. Hoffman PF. 1988. United Plates of America, the birth of a craton: Early Proterozoic assembly and growth of Laurentia. Annu. Rev. Earth Planet. Sci. 16:543–603 [Google Scholar]
  57. Hoffman PF, Dewey JF, Burke K. 1974. Aulacogens and their genetic relation to geosynclines. Soc. Econ. Paleontol. Mineral. Spec. Publ. 19:38–55 [Google Scholar]
  58. Jacobs JA, Russell RD, Wilson JT. 1973. Physics and Geology New York: McGraw-Hill622
  59. Johnston ST. 2008. The Cordilleran ribbon continent of North America. Annu. Rev. Earth Planet. Sci. 36:495–530 [Google Scholar]
  60. Kennedy WQ. 1965. The influence of basement structure on the evolution of the coastal (Mesozoic and Tertiary) basins. Salt Basins Around Africa DC Ion 7–16 London: Inst. Petroleum [Google Scholar]
  61. Lapen TJ, Righter M, Brandon AD, Debaille V, Beard BL. et al. 2010. A younger age for ALH84001 and its geochemical link to shergottite sources in Mars. Science 328:347–51 [Google Scholar]
  62. Leelanandam C, Burke K, Ashwal LD, Webb SJ. 2006. Proterozoic mountain building in India: an analysis based primarily on alkaline rock distribution. Geol. Mag. 143:2195–212 [Google Scholar]
  63. Le Pichon X. 1968. Sea-floor spreading and continental drift. J. Geophys. Res. 73:3661–97 [Google Scholar]
  64. Lithgow-Bertelloni C, Silver PG. 1998. Dynamic topography, plate driving forces and the African superswell. Nature 395:6699269–72 [Google Scholar]
  65. Mann P, Burke K. 1990. Transverse intra-arc rifting: Palaeogene Wagwater Belt, Jamaica. Mar. Petroleum Geol. 7:410–27 [Google Scholar]
  66. Mann P, Taylor FW, Burke K, Kulstad R. 1984. Subaerially exposed Holocene coral reef, Enriquillo Valley, Dominican Republic. Geol. Soc. Am. Bull. 95:1084–92 [Google Scholar]
  67. McKenzie DP, Parker RL. 1967. The north Pacific: an example of tectonics on a sphere. Nature 216:1276–80 [Google Scholar]
  68. McKenzie DP, Weiss N. 1975. Speculations on the thermal and tectonic history of the Earth. Geophys. J. R. Astron. Soc. 42:131–74 [Google Scholar]
  69. Molnar P, Tapponnier P. 1975. Cenozoic tectonics of Asia: effects of a continental collision. Science 189:4201419–26 [Google Scholar]
  70. Montelli R, Nolet G, Dahlen FA, Masters G. 2006. A catalogue of deep mantle plumes: new results from finite-frequency tomography. Geochem. Geophys. Geosyst. 7:Q11007 [Google Scholar]
  71. Montelli R, Nolet G, Dahlen FA, Masters G, Engdahl ER, Hung SH. 2004. Finite-frequency tomography reveals a variety of plumes in the mantle. Science 303:338–43 [Google Scholar]
  72. Morgan WJ. 1968. Rises, trenches, great faults, and crustal blocks. J. Geophys. Res. 73:1959–82 [Google Scholar]
  73. Morgan WJ. 1971. Convection plumes in the lower mantle. Nature 230:42–43 [Google Scholar]
  74. Nimmo F, Tanaka K. 2005. Early crustal evolution of Mars. Annu. Rev. Earth Planet. Sci. 33:133–61 [Google Scholar]
  75. O'Connor JM, Stoffers P, van den Bogaard P, McWilliams M. 1999. First seamount age evidence for significantly slower African plate motion since 19 to 30 Ma. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 171:575–89 [Google Scholar]
  76. Rosencrantz E, Mann P. 1991. SeaMARC II mapping of transform faults in the Cayman Trough, Caribbean Sea. Geology 19:7690–93 [Google Scholar]
  77. Scotese CR, Gahagan LM, Ross MR. 1987. Paleogeographic mapping project Phanerozoic plate reconstructions. Tech. Rep. 90 Inst. Geophys., Univ. Tex. Austin, Tex.: [Google Scholar]
  78. Şengör AMC. 1995. Sedimentation and tectonics of fossil rifts. Tectonics of Sedimentary Basins CJ Busby, RV Ingersoll 53–117 Cambridge: Blackwell Sci [Google Scholar]
  79. Şengör AMC. 2001. Elevation as indicator of mantle-plume activity. Geol. Soc. Am. Spec. Pap. 352:183–225 [Google Scholar]
  80. Şengör AMC, Burke K, Dewey JF. 1978. Rifts at high angles to orogenic belts: tests for their origin and the Upper Rhine Graben as an example. Am. J. Sci. 278:24–40 [Google Scholar]
  81. Şengör AMC, Natal'in BA. 1996a. Paleotectonics of Asia: fragments of a synthesis. The Tectonic Evolution of Asia A Yin, TM Harrison 486–640 Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press [Google Scholar]
  82. Şengör AMC, Natal'in BA. 1996b. Turkic-type orogeny and its role in the making of the continental crust. Annu. Rev. Earth Planet. Sci. 24:263–337 [Google Scholar]
  83. Şengör AMC, Natal'in BA. 2001. Rifts of the world. Geol. Soc. Am. Spec. Pap. 352:389–482 [Google Scholar]
  84. Sobolev SV, Babeyko AY. 2005. What drives orogeny in the Andes?. Geology 33:8617–20 [Google Scholar]
  85. Sykes LR. 1967. Mechanism of earthquakes and nature of faulting on the mid-oceanic ridges. J. Geophys. Res. 72:2131–53 [Google Scholar]
  86. Taylor FW, Mann P, Valastro S Jr, Burke K. 1985. Stratigraphy and radiocarbon chronology of a subaerially exposed Holocene coral reef, Dominican Republic. J. Geol. 93:311–32 [Google Scholar]
  87. Thiessen R, Burke K, Kidd WSF. 1979. African hotspots and their relation to the underlying mantle. Geology 7:263–66 [Google Scholar]
  88. Torsvik TH, Burke K, Steinberger B, Webb SJ, Ashwal LD. 2010. Diamonds sampled by plumes from the core-mantle boundary. Nature 466:352–55 [Google Scholar]
  89. Torsvik TH, Smethurst MA, Burke K, Steinberger B. 2006. Large igneous provinces generated from the margins of the large low-velocity provinces in the deep mantle. Geophys. J. Int. 167:1447–60 [Google Scholar]
  90. Torsvik TH, Steinberger B, Cocks LRM, Burke K. 2008. Longitude: linking Earth's ancient surface to its deep interior. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 276:273–82 [Google Scholar]
  91. Trønnes RG. 2009. Structure, mineralogy and dynamics of the lowermost mantle. Mineral. Petrol. 99:243–61 [Google Scholar]
  92. van Keken PE, Hauri EH, Ballentine CJ. 2002. Mantle mixing: the generation, preservation, and destruction of chemical heterogeneity. Annu. Rev. Earth Planet. Sci. 30:493–525 [Google Scholar]
  93. Wilson JT. 1963. A possible origin of the Hawaiian Islands. Can. J. Phys. 41:863–68 [Google Scholar]
  94. Wilson JT. 1965a. A new class of faults and their bearing on continental drift. Nature 207:343–47 [Google Scholar]
  95. Wilson JT. 1965b. Submarine fracture zones, aseismic ridges and the International Council of Scientific Unions line: proposed western margin of the East Pacific ridge. Nature 207:907–11 [Google Scholar]
  96. Wilson JT. 1966. Are the structures of the Caribbean and Scotia arc regions analogous to ice rafting?. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 1:5335–38 [Google Scholar]
  97. Wilson JT. 1968. Static or mobile earth: the current scientific revolution. Proc. Am. Philos. Soc. 112:5309–20 [Google Scholar]
  98. Wilson JT. 1976. Continents Adrift and Continents Aground: Readings from Scientific American San Francisco: Freeman
  99. Wilson JT, Burke K. 1972. Two types of mountain building. Nature 239:448–49 [Google Scholar]
  100. Woolley AR. 2000. Alkaline Rocks and Carbonatites of the World, Part 3: Africa Bath, UK: Geol. Soc. Lond.
  101. Zhong S, Zhang N, Li ZX, Roberts JH. 2007. Supercontinent cycles, true polar wander, and very long-wavelength mantle convection. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 261:551–64 [Google Scholar]
/content/journals/10.1146/annurev-earth-040809-152521
Loading
/content/journals/10.1146/annurev-earth-040809-152521
Loading

Data & Media loading...

  • Article Type: Review Article
This is a required field
Please enter a valid email address
Approval was a Success
Invalid data
An Error Occurred
Approval was partially successful, following selected items could not be processed due to error