New England hotspot

The New England hotspot is marked 28 on this map.
A portion of the track of the New England hotspot. The westernmost white dot is Mont Royal in Montreal. The white dot just off the continental shelf is the Bear seamount.

The New England hotspot, also referred to as the Great Meteor hotspot and sometimes the Monteregian hotspot, is a volcanic hotspot in the North Atlantic Ocean. It created the Monteregian Hills intrusions in Montreal and Montérégie, the White Mountains intrusions in New Hampshire, the New England and Corner Rise seamounts off the coast of North America, and the Seewarte Seamounts east of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge on the African Plate, the latter of which include its most recent eruptive center, the Great Meteor Seamount.[1][2][3] The New England, Great Meteor, or Monteregian hotspot track has been used to estimate the movement of the North American Plate away from the African Plate from the early Cretaceous period to the present using the fixed hotspot reference frame.[4]

  1. ^ Sleep, N.H. (1990). "Monteregian hotspot track: A long‐lived mantle plume". Journal of Geophysical Research. 95 (B13): 21983–21990. Bibcode:1990JGR....9521983S. doi:10.1029/JB095iB13p21983.
  2. ^ Tucholke, B.E.; Smoot, N.C. (1990). "Evidence for age and evolution of Corner Seamounts and Great Meteor Seamount Chain from multibeam bathymetry". Journal of Geophysical Research. 95 (B11): 17555–17569. Bibcode:1990JGR....9517555T. doi:10.1029/JB095iB11p17555. hdl:1912/5785.
  3. ^ Condie, K.C. (2001). Mantle plumes and their record in Earth history. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-80604-6.
  4. ^ Duncan, R.A. (1984). "Age progressive volcanism in the New England Seamounts and the opening of the central Atlantic Ocean". Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth. 89 (B12): 9980–9990. Bibcode:1984JGR....89.9980D. doi:10.1029/JB089iB12p09980.

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