The 'East Pacific Rise' is a long north-south welt of
seafloor spreading under the eastern
Pacific Ocean from near Antarctica in the south northward to its termination at the northern end of the Gulf of California in the Salton Sea basin in southern California. The rise is a constructive
tectonic plate margin or
divergent boundary lying along the eastern margin of the
Pacific Ocean basin. The spreading zone separates the
Pacific Plate to the west from (south to north) the
Antarctic Plate, the
Nazca Plate,
Cocos Plate, and the
North American Plate.
Overview
The
volcanic Galapagos Islands are located above a
hotspot on the
Galapagos Rise, a spreading zone that extends east from a
triple junction with the Pacific Rise. This triple junction separates the Pacific, Nazca, and Cocos plates, but in a unique manner: a small microplate, the
Galapagos Microplate, occupies the triple point, rotating clockwise between the surrounding larger plates.
The rise lies in part under the
Gulf of California and southern-most part of the
Salton Sea where it terminates at its junction with the San Andreas Fault. The San Andreas is a
transform fault boundary between the East Pacific Rise and the
Gorda Ridge off the coast of
Oregon.
The
oceanic crust is moving away from the East Pacific Rise to either side. On the eastern side the eastward moving plates meet the westward moving
South American Plate and is being
subducted under it. The belt of
volcanoes along the
Andes and the arc of volcanoes through
Central America and
Mexico are the direct results of this collision.
South of
Easter Island the East Pacific Rise splits at another triple junction with the
Chile Rise trending off to the east where is meets the subduction zone along the coast of southern
Chile. The southern extension of the East Pacific Rise (called the
Pacific-Antarctic Ridge, merges with the
Mid-Indian Ridge at a triple junction south of
New Zealand.
Along the East Pacific Rise the
hydrothermal vents called
black smokers were first discovered and have been extensively studied. These vents are forming
volcanogenic massive sulfide ore deposits on the ocean floor. Many strange deep-water creatures have been found here. The southern stretch of the East Pacific Rise is one of the fastest-spreading sections of the Earth's
mid-ocean ridge system.
External links
★
Scripps Institution of Oceanography East Pacific Rise Marine EM website
★
Galapagos rise and microplate