Earth:Daikakuji Guyot

From HandWiki
Short description: Seamount in the Hawaiian Emperor chain bend area
Daikakuji Seamount
EmperorSeamounts.jpg
Elevation of the Pacific seafloor, showing the Hawaiian-Emperor seamount chain, including Daikakuji Seamount near the prominent V-shaped bend, which separates the Hawaiian Ridge from the older Emperor Seamount portion of the chain. Daikakuji is the southeastern of the two moderately-sized seamounts just after the bottom of the V-bend, and the most recent of the large volcanoes for a long time.
Summit depth1,000 m (3,281 ft)
Height4,000 m (157,480 in)
Summit area30 km (19 mi) diameter
Location
LocationCentral Pacific Ocean
GroupEmperor seamounts
Coordinates [ ⚑ ] : 32°5.00′N 172°18′E / 32.083°N 172.3°E / 32.083; 172.3
Geology
TypeGuyot
Volcanic arc/chainHawaiian-Emperor seamount chain
Age of rock47 million years
History
First visitGLORIA program, USGS[1] [2]

Daikakuji Seamount is a seamount (underwater volcano) and the southwesternmost volcanic feature in the Hawaiian Emperor chain bend area.

Geology

The seamount is very close to the V-shaped bend in the Hawaiian-Emperor seamount chain, and thus would be useful in understanding the exact age of the bend. Although few dredge samples are available, they have all been reliably dated at 47 million years (Sharp and Clague, Science, 313, 1281–84, 2006), during the Eocene epoch of the Paleogene period.

During the cruise SO112 of the R/V SONNE, high resolution bathymetric mapping was conducted, showing that Daikakuji is nearly 30 km (19 mi) in diameter and nearly 4,000 m (13,123 ft) in height, with a summit lying 1,000 m (3,281 ft) underwater.

Because of its flat capped top, Daikakuji is considered a guyot. A smaller, younger, secondary guyot just east of the main mass overlaps its slope. The western site suffered a large collapse sometime in its history, evident by a large slump, that likely carried away a significant part of the volcano's caldera.

Daikakuji Seamount has some well developed rift zones oriented towards the Emperor portion of the chain, whereas the younger, secondary cone has rift flanks in the direction of the Hawaiian ridge.

See also

  • List of volcanoes in the Hawaiian – Emperor seamount chain

References