Island Arc: Location
Island Arc: Location
Island arc
Island arcs are long chains of active volcanoes with intense seismic activity found along
convergent tectonic plate boundaries. Most island arcs originate on oceanic crust and have resulted
from the descent of the lithosphere into the mantle along the subduction zone. They are the
principal way by which continental growth is achieved.[1]
Location
Most modern island arcs are near the continental margins (particularly in the northern and
western margins of the Pacific Ocean). However, no direct evidence from within the arcs shows
that they have always existed at their present position with respect to the continents, although
evidence from some continental margins suggests that some arcs may have migrated toward the
continents during the late Mesozoic or early Cenozoic.[2] They are also found at oceanic-oceanic
convergence zones, in which case the older plate will subduct under the younger one.
The movement of the island arcs towards the continent could be possible if, at some point, the
ancient Benioff zones dipped toward the present ocean rather than toward the continent, as in
most arcs today. This will have resulted in the loss of ocean floor between the arc and the
continent, and consequently, in the migration of the arc during spreading episodes.[2]
The fracture zones in which some active island arcs terminate may be interpreted in terms of plate
tectonics as resulting from movement along transform faults,[4][5] which are plate margins where
the crust is neither being consumed nor generated. Thus the present location of these inactive
island chains is due to the present pattern of lithospheric plates. However, their volcanic history,
which indicates that they are fragments of older island arcs, is not necessarily related to the
present plate pattern and may be due to differences in position of plate margins in the past.
Tectonic formation
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On the subducting side of the island arc is a deep and narrow oceanic trench, which is the trace at
the Earth's surface of the boundary between the down-going and overriding plates. This trench is
created by the downward gravitational pull of the relatively dense subducting plate on the leading
edge of the plate. Multiple earthquakes occur along this subduction boundary with the seismic
hypocenters located at increasing depth under the island arc: these quakes define the Benioff
zone.[10][11]
Island arcs can be formed in intra-oceanic settings, or from the fragments of continental crust that
have migrated away from an adjacent continental land mass or at subduction-related volcanoes
active at the margins of continents.
Features
Below are some of the generalized features present in most island arcs.
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Back-arc basin: They are also referred to as marginal seas and are formed in the inner, concave
side of island arcs bounded by back-arc ridges. They develop in response to tensional tectonics due
to rifting of an existing island arc.
Benioff zone or Wadati-Benioff zone: This is a plane that dips under the overriding plate where
intense volcanic activity occurs, which is defined by the location of seismic events below the arc.
Earthquakes occur from near surface to ~660 km depth. The dip of Benioff zones ranges from 30°
to near vertical.[12]
An ocean basin may be formed between the continental margin and the island arcs on the concave
side of the arc. These basins have a crust which is either oceanic or intermediate between the
normal oceanic crust and that typical of continents; heat flow in the basins is higher than in normal
continental or oceanic areas.[2]
Some arcs, such as the Aleutians, pass laterally into the continental shelf on the concave side of the
arc,[13] while most of the arcs are separated from the continental crust.
Movement between two lithospheric plates explains the major features of active island arcs. The
island arc and small ocean basin are situated on the overlying plate which meets the descending
plate containing normal oceanic crust along the Benioff zone. The sharp bending of the oceanic
plate downward produces a trench.[14]
This volcanic series is related to the age of the subduction zone and the depth. The tholeiitic
magma series is well represented above young subduction zones formed by magma from relative
shallow depth. The calc-alkaline and alkaline series are seen in mature subduction zones, and are
related to magma of greater depths. Andesite and basaltic andesite are the most abundant volcanic
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rock in island arc which is indicative of the calc-alkaline magmas. Some Island arcs have
distributed volcanic series as can be seen in the Japanese island arc system where the volcanic
rocks change from tholeiite—calc-alkaline—alkaline with increasing distance from the trench.[15]
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Several processes are involved in arc magmatism which gives rise to the great spectrum of rock
composition encountered. These processes are, but not limited to, magma mixing, fractionation,
variations in the depth and degree of partial melting and assimilation. Therefore, the three volcanic
series results in a wide range of rock composition and do not correspond to absolute magma types
or source regions.[6]
South China
Philippine Sea
Philippine Islands Philippines Philippine Trench Sea, Celebes Eurasian Plate
Plate
Sea
Java Sea,
Sunda Arc Indonesia Java Trench Eurasian Plate Australian Plate
Flores Sea
Andaman and Northern Java Indo-Australian
India Andaman Sea Eurasian Plate
Nicobar Islands Trench Plate
Philippine Sea
Mariana Islands United States Mariana Trench Pacific Plate
Plate
Bismarck Papua New New Britain
Pacific Plate Australian Plate
Archipelago Guinea Trench
New Hebrides
New Hebrides Vanuatu Pacific Plate Australian Plate
Trench
Tonga islands Tonga Tonga Trench Australian Plate Pacific Plate
North American
Puerto Rico
Antilles Caribbean Caribbean Plate Plate, South
Trench
American Plate
British
South Sandwich South Sandwich South American
Overseas Scotia Sea Scotia Plate
Islands Trench Plate
Territory
Eastern Aegean Sea
Aegean or Hellenic
Greece Mediterranean Aegean Sea Plate or African Plate
arc
Trench Hellenic Plate
Remains of former island arcs have been identified at some locations. The table below mention a
selection of these.
Intermontane Islands Canada, United States Accreted to North America in the Jurassic.
See also
Islands portal
Back-arc basin
High island
Volcanic arc
References
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