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Galapagos Rift

Galapagos Rift at 86°W

Fissure vent · Ecuador · 2430m (submarine)

Submarine eruptions at mid-ocean ridges produce pillow lavas, which form as lava slowly erupts from a fissure on the sea floor. The E-W-trending Galápagos Rift located north of the Galápagos Islands is an oceanic spreading ridge between the Cocos plate to the north and the Nazca plate to the south. A large area of hydrothermal vents along the crest of the ridge ENE of the Galápagos Islands was discovered in 1977, along with evidence of a recent eruption.
Submarine eruptions at mid-ocean ridges produce pillow lavas, which form as lava slowly erupts from a fissure on the sea floor. The E-W-trending Galápagos Rift located north of the Galápagos Islands is an oceanic spreading ridge between the Cocos plate to the north and the Nazca plate to the south. A large area of hydrothermal vents along the crest of the ridge ENE of the Galápagos Islands was discovered in 1977, along with evidence of a recent eruption. · Photo: Image courtesy of NOAA Ocean Explorer, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. · Wikimedia Commons
Type
Fissure vent
Country
Ecuador
Region
Eastern Pacific Volcanic Regions / Galapagos Rift Volcanic Province
Elevation
2430m (submarine)
Coordinates
0.792, -86.150
Last eruption
1996
Tectonic setting
Rift zone / Oceanic crust (< 15 km)
Landform
Cluster
Major rock type
Basalt / Picro-Basalt
Geological summary

The Galápagos Rift is an oceanic spreading ridge between the Cocos plate to the north and the Nazca plate to the south. A large area of hydrothermal vents along the crest of the ridge ENE of the Galápagos Islands was discovered in 1977. The location listed here is the position of Clambake vent, which was surrounded by very youthful sediment-free flows of basaltic sheet lava. This position is at the northern limit of the location error circle for a 1972 earthquake swarm and only a few kilometers south of a concurrent fish kill (Macdonald and Mudie, 1974) that may have been associated with extrusion of lava flows. Very fresh, glassy, sediment-free sheet-flow lavas observed during dives near this site in February and March 1977 (Corliss et al., 1979); the morphology of the flows suggested that they were less than 5 years old (Chadwick and Embley, 1994). The rift at this point consists of a small rift valley 3-4 km wide with walls 200-250 m high. A low axial ridge formed by the youngest sediment-free lava flows rises about 20 m above the valley floor, flanked by older marginal ridges. A 2002 expedition discovered evidence for new lava flows covering markers emplaced in 1990.

Eruption history

Summary (VEI over time)
Click a bar to see individual eruptions
1972~1974 · 1 eruptions · max VEI 01994~1996 · 1 eruptions · max VEI 019721977198419891994

Detailed timeline

  1. 1996 (±6 yrs)VEI 0Observed
    1996-07-02 – Ongoing
    Rose Garden hydrothermal vent field
  2. 1972VEI 0Observed
    1972-06-29 – Ongoing
    Clambake vent area

External links

⚠ For reference only. Not for emergency response.