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97741


Date: February 03, 2024 at 09:11:21
From: Redhart, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Magma chamber found under Denali in Alaska..

URL: https://www.deltawindonline.com/features/alaska_science_forum/magma-found-beneath-volcano-less-country/article_b95bb554-c0b7-11ee-b7f6-03ccc65249d3.html


Magma found beneath volcano-less country
Ned Rozell, UAF Geophysical Institute 22 mins ago
Comments

For years, scientists have wondered why North America’s
highest mountain is not a volcano. All the ingredients
for volcanic activity lurk deep beneath Denali, which
sits above where one planetary plate grinds past
another.

Recently, while looking for something else, researchers
found a reservoir of what might be magma, 7 miles
beneath the muskeg of middle Alaska.

The spot intrigues Carl Tape because above it, at the
ground surface, are ancient volcanic features.

Tape is a seismologist with the University of Alaska
Fairbanks Geophysical In-stitute. A few years ago, he
headed a team that peppered seismic instruments along
the Parks Highway and on the Denali seismic fault. They
installed hundreds of seismometers at spots along the
road and dozens more right on the fault.

While looking at the seismometer data, which revealed
ground motions large and small, Tape and his colleagues
noticed a spot where earthen waves slowed down as they
passed through.

“Sometimes a slowdown is due to sediments, such as
those in the Tanana (River) valley,” he said.
“Sometimes it’s due to magma. This one is beneath the
Buzzard Creek maars.”

The Buzzard Creek maars are two vegetated craters
northeast of Healy. They formed when molten rock rose
to the water table and blew up about 3,000 years ago.
Geologists have found rocks around Buzzard Creek with
the same chemical signature as Aleutian volcanoes.

Those volcanic features near Healy are within a region
scientists have named the “Denali Volcanic Gap.” The
gap is a puzzling absence of volcanoes from Mount Spurr
(across Cook Inlet from Anchorage) to the Wrangell
Mountains in eastern Alaska.

Volcanic activity of the Aleutian Islands seems to end
at Mount Spurr, but if the curve of the Aleutian Arc
were to extend north it would intersect the Alaska
Range.

Other conditions there are favorable for volcanoes,
too: Most of the Aleutians are located about 60 miles
above where the slab of the Pacific plate plunges
beneath the North American plate. The Buzzard Creek
craters and the mountains of the Alaska Range
(including Denali) are located about 60 miles above the
interface of the giant plates.

University of Utah student Santiago Rabade pored over
subtle signals picked up by the dense network temporary
seismometers Tape and his team had set up quickly in
February 2019. Then, they performed rare winter
fieldwork to detect aftershocks from a 7.0 Anchorage
earthquake on Nov. 30, 2018.

The earthen hum generated by ocean waves disturbing the
sea floor is a constant source of noise we can’t feel
but seismometers can; that signal allowed the
scientists to detect the patch of magma beneath the
Buzzard Creek craters.

“We had zero plan to look for what we found,” Tape
said. “It’s fun to find results when you don’t seek
them. And it’s generally better science.”

A next logical step to discover more about the mystery
magma spot would be to cluster seismic instruments
directly above it. Tape is hoping his team’s recent
paper will inspire someone to take a closer look at the
red blob that might help solve the riddle of the Denali
Volcanic Gap.

Since the late 1970s, the University of Alaska
Fairbanks' Geophysical In-stitute has provided this
column free in cooperation with the UAF research
community. Ned Rozell ned.rozell@alaska.edu is a
science writer for the Geophysical Institute.


Responses:
[97743]


97743


Date: February 03, 2024 at 17:18:28
From: georg, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Magma chamber found under Denali in Alaska..


this is the tail end of the Kula plate ... and its
spreading center junction with the Pacific plate ...
they have know about the existence of this Kula plate
for at least forty years ... I first saw a map of its
location in the bight ... this a poster sized map over
the main door in the geophysics department building
where I was visiting for a research paper ... I stood in
the hallway studying the map for quite a while ...
wondering what happens when a spreading center is
subducted ... might cause complications if the Pacific
plate stubs it's big toe in the doorway ... it might
apply enough torque to cause the earth to topple


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