Abstract:
The Macquarie Ridge Complex (MRC) forms the submarine expression of the
Australia‐Pacific plate boundary south of New Zealand, comprising a rugged
bathymetry made up of numerous seamounts along its length. Tectonic plate
reconstructions show that the plate boundary evolved from divergent to
transpressional relative plate motion from ca. 40 – 6 Ma. However, only limited
geological observation of the products of past seafloor spreading and present
transpressional deformation has been achieved. This study presents new high-resolution
multibeam, photographic, petrologic and geochemical data for 10
seamounts located along the MRC in order to elucidate the current nature and
evolution of the plate boundary.
Seamounts are oriented parallel to the plate boundary, characterized by elongate
forms, and deformed by transform faulting. Three guyot‐type seamounts display
summit plateaux that were formed by wave and current erosion. MRC seafloor is
composed of alkaline to sub‐alkaline basaltic pillow, massive and sheet lava flows,
lava talus, volcaniclastic breccia, diabase and gabbro. This oceanic crust was formed
during effusive mid‐ocean ridge volcanism at the relic Macquarie spreading centre
and has since been sheared, accreted and exhumed along the modern
transpressional plate boundary. Major element systematics indicate samples
originated from spatially distinct magmatic sources and have since been juxtaposed
at seamounts due to transpressional relative plate motion. MRC seamounts have
formed as discrete elevations as a result of dip‐slip and strike‐slip faulting of the
ridge axis. Thus, MRC seamounts are volcanic in origin but are now the
morphological manifestations of tectonic and geomorphic processes.
Petrologic and geochemical characteristics of volcanic glass samples from the MRC
indicate that both effusive and explosive eruption styles operated at the relic
Macquarie spreading centre. Primitive and sub‐alkaline to transitional basaltic
magma that rose efficiently to the seafloor was erupted effusively and cooled to form lava flows with low vesicle and phenocryst contents or was granulated on
contact with seawater to form hyaloclasts deposited in volcaniclastic breccias. More
alkaline magmas that underwent crystal fractionation and volatile exsolution in
shallow reservoirs were fragmented and erupted during submarine hawaiian‐type
eruptions. Such a scenario is likely to have occurred during the final stages of
magmatism at the Australia‐Pacific plate boundary south of New Zealand when
seafloor spreading was ultraslow or had ceased, which induced low degrees of
partial melting and retarded magma ascent rates.
All MRC samples display enriched mid‐ocean ridge basalt (E‐MORB) trace element
characteristics. The sample suite can be divided into two groups, with Group 1
samples distinguished from Group 2 samples by their lower concentrations of highly
incompatible trace elements, flatter LREE slopes, higher MgO contents and lower
alkali element contents. Group 1 basalts were derived from low degree partial
melting of spinel lherzolite generated during the late stages of mid‐ocean ridge
volcanism at the plate boundary when seafloor spreading rates were slow to
ultraslow (full spreading rate < 20 mm yr⁻¹). Group 2 basalts were derived from low
degree partial melting of spinel lherzolite, mixed with small amounts of very low
degree partial melting of garnet lherzolite, during post‐spreading volcanism at the
MRC. Remnant heat from previous seafloor spreading induced buoyant ascent of
the sub‐ridge mantle and enriched heterogeneities were preferentially tapped by
the ensuing low melt fractions. Magma ascent was stalled due to the cessation of
extension at the ridge and the melts underwent crystal fractionation prior to
eruption, which accounts for the lower MgO contents of Group 2 basalts. The
pervasive incompatible element‐enrichment of MRC basalts and similarity to lavas
from fossil spreading ridges in the eastern Pacific Ocean may reflect regional
enrichment of the Pacific upper mantle.