How world’s biggest volcanoes formed unveiled

MELBOURNE, May 4:  The 168-year-old mystery of how the world’s biggest and most active volcanoes formed in Hawaii has been solved, scientists said today.
The study found that the volcanoes formed along twin tracks due to a shift in the Pacific plate’s direction three million years ago.
The Pacific Plate is a tectonic plate that lies beneath the Pacific Ocean. At 103 million square kilometres, it is the largest tectonic plate on the Earth.
Lead researcher Tim Jones from Australian National University (ANU) said the scientists had known of the existence of the twin volcanic tracks since 1849, but the cause of them had remained a mystery until now.
“The discovery helps to better reconstruct Earth’s history and understand part of the world that has captivated people’s imagination,” said Jones, a PhD student from the ANU Research School of Earth Sciences (RSES).
“The analysis we did on past Pacific plate motions is the first to reveal that there was a substantial change in motion 3 million years ago.
“It helps to explain the origin of Hawaii, Earth’s biggest volcanic hot-spot and one of the most popular tourist destinations in the world,” Jones said.
Twin volcanic tracks exist in other parts of the Pacific, including Samoa, and the new study published in the journal Nature found that these also emerged three million years ago.
Jones said this kind of volcanic activity was surprising because it occurred away from tectonic plate boundaries, where most volcanoes are found.
“Heat from the Earth’s core causes hot columns of rock, called mantle plumes, to rise under tectonic plates and produce volcanic activity on the surface,” he said.
“Mantle plumes have played a role in mass extinctions, the creation of diamonds and the breaking up of continents,” Jones said.
The twin volcanic tracks emerged because the mantle plume was out of alignment with the direction of the plate motion, said co-researcher Rhodri Davies from RSES.
“Our hypothesis predicts that the plate and the plume will realign again at some stage in the future, and the two tracks will merge to form a single track once again,” Davies said.
“Plate shifts have been occurring constantly, but irregularly, throughout Earth’s history. Looking further back in time we find that double tracks are not unique to young Hawaiian volcanism – indeed, they coincide with other past changes in plate motion,” said Davies.
Hawaii sits at the south-eastern limit of a chain of volcanoes and submerged sea-mounts which get progressively older towards the north west. (AGENCIES)