The thickness and internal properties of the magma sill
located at the top the axial magma chamber (AMC) along the
East Pacific Rise (EPR) have been investigated through a
combination of waveform modeling the near-vertical incidence
reflections from this body and analysis of reflection
amplitude variation as a function of source-receiver offset
(or slowness). Our results show that the AMC reflector
observed along the southern EPR is best modeled by a thin
(<100 m thick) sill of partial melt ( km/s)
sandwiched between higher velocity material, and that the
thickest sills are generally associated with the lowest
P- and S- wave velocities. The comparatively high P-wave
and non-zero shear wave velocities inferred for this sill
indicate that it is filled with partially molten magma which
in some locations has a high crystal content. This may have
important implications for eruption mechanisms and
along-axis mixing of magma at the EPR. There is no simple
relationship between morphologic indicators of magma supply
(e.g. axial depth or volume) and sill thickness, depth, or
velocity. Magma sill properties may be closely tied to the
eruption and replenishment cycle of the AMC and thus may
vary on a much shorter spatial and temporal scale than axial
morphology, which reflects longer-term variations in magma
supply to the ridge.
AGU Index Terms: 3035 Midocean ridge processes; 3025 Marine seismics; 0935 Seismic methods; 8145 Physics of magma and magma bodies
Keywords/Free Terms: Midocean ridge, magma sill, seismic velocity, crystal content.
JGR-Solid Earth 96JB01907