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Aussie scientists discover tectonic plate secrets after drilling into Pacific Ocean seafloor

Xinhua, November 23, 2015 Adjust font size:

Australian scientists drilling into the Pacific Ocean seafloor have discovered what happens when one tectonic plate first gets pushed under another.

The scientists, part of an international expedition, recently drilled into the floor and found that distinctive rocks had formed when the Pacific tectonic plate changed direction and began to plunge under the Philippine Sea Plate about 50 million years ago.

"It's a bit like a rugby scrum, with two rows of forwards pushing on each other. Then one side goes down and the other side goes over the top," said study leader Professor Richard Arculus on Monday.

Arculus, a petrologist in the Research School of Earth Sciences at Australian National University (ANU) in Canberra, said, "But we never knew what started the scrum collapsing."

The new knowledge will help scientists understand the huge earthquakes and volcanoes that form where the Earth's plates collide and one plate gets pushed under the other.

As part of the International Ocean Discovery Program (IOCP), the team studied the sea floor in 4,700 meters of water in the Amami Sankaku Basin of the north-western Pacific Ocean, near the Izu-Bonin-Mariana Trench, which forms the deepest parts of the Earth's oceans.

Drilling 1,600 meters into the sea floor, the team recovered rock types from the extensive rifts and big volcanoes that were initiated as one plate bored under the other in a process known as subduction.

"We found rocks low in titanium, but high in scandium and vanadium, so the Earth's mantle overlying the subducting plate must have been around 1,300 degrees Celsius and perhaps 150 degrees hotter than we expected to find," Arculus said.

The team found the tectonic scrum collapsed at the south end first and then the Pacific Plate rapidly collapsed 1,000 km northwards in about one million years.

"It's quite complex. There's a scissoring motion going on. You'd need skycam to see the 3D nature of it," Arculus said.

Arculus said the new knowledge could give insights into the formation of copper and gold deposits that were often formed where plates collide.

The IODP is the world's largest geoscience research program with 26 countries in its membership.

The team's research is published in the journal, Nature Geoscience. Enditem