
The Juan de Fuca Ridge is a
mid-ocean spreading center and
divergent plate boundary located off the coast of the
Pacific Northwest
The Pacific Northwest (PNW; ) is a geographic region in Western North America bounded by its coastal waters of the Pacific Ocean to the west and, loosely, by the Rocky Mountains to the east. Though no official boundary exists, the most common ...
region of North America, named after
Juan de Fuca. The ridge separates the
Pacific Plate to the west and the
Juan de Fuca Plate to the east. It runs generally northward, with a length of approximately . The ridge is a section of what remains from the larger
Pacific-Farallon Ridge which used to be the primary spreading center of this region, driving the
Farallon Plate underneath the
North American Plate through the process of
plate tectonics
Plate tectonics (, ) is the scientific theory that the Earth's lithosphere comprises a number of large tectonic plates, which have been slowly moving since 3–4 billion years ago. The model builds on the concept of , an idea developed durin ...
. Today, the Juan de Fuca Ridge pushes the Juan de Fuca Plate underneath the North American plate, forming the
Cascadia Subduction Zone.
Discovery
The first indications of a submarine ridge off the coast of the Pacific Northwest was discovered by the , a
United States Navy
The United States Navy (USN) is the naval warfare, maritime military branch, service branch of the United States Department of Defense. It is the world's most powerful navy with the largest Displacement (ship), displacement, at 4.5 millio ...
sloop under the command of
George Belknap, in 1874. Surveying a route for an undersea cable between the United States and Japan, the USS ''Tuscarora'' discovered a
submarine mountain range approximately from
Cape Flattery, which they did not consider a major discovery because throughout their voyage they found other locations with a larger profile, making the ridge seem insignificant in comparison.
Geologic history

The Juan de Fuca Ridge was at one point a part of the larger Pacific-Farallon ridge system. Approximately 30 million years ago, the
Farallon Plate, being driven outwards by the Pacific-Farallon ridge, was pushed underneath the
North American Plate, splitting what remained into the
Juan de Fuca Plate to the North and the
Cocos Plate and
Nazca Plate
The Nazca plate or Nasca plate, named after the Nazca region of southern Peru, is an oceanic list of tectonic plates, tectonic plate in the eastern Pacific Ocean basin off the west coast of South America. The ongoing subduction, along the Peru– ...
to the South.
Notable features
Axial Seamount
Axial Seamount (also Coaxial Seamount or Axial Volcano) is a seamount, submarine volcano, and underwater shield volcano in the Pacific Ocean, located on the Juan de Fuca Ridge, approximately west of Cannon Beach, Oregon. Standing high, Axial S ...
is a
submarine volcano located on the ridge at a depth of below sea level, rising above the average ridge height.
Axial is the most active volcano in the northeastern Pacific basin, and an underwater
cabled observatory has been installed there as a part of the
National Science Foundation's Ocean Observatories Initiative, making it one of the best studied volcanoes along mid-ocean ridges globally.
The Endeavour segment in the northern end of the ridge is another active and highly studied region. Sharp chemical and thermal contrasts, high levels of seismic activity, dense biological communities, and unique hydrothermal systems all make the segment a primary focus of research.
Some of the most intense and most active
hydrothermal vent
Hydrothermal vents are fissures on the seabed from which geothermally heated water discharges. They are commonly found near volcanically active places, areas where tectonic plates are moving apart at mid-ocean ridges, ocean basins, and hot ...
s are located along the Endeavour segment, with more than 800 individual known chimneys within the ridge's central region, and a total of five major hydrothermal fields along the ridge. These chimneys release large amounts of sulphur-rich minerals into the water, which allow bacteria to oxidize organic compounds and metabolize
anaerobically. This allows for a diverse ecosystem of organisms to exist in the low-oxygen conditions near the seafloor around the ridge.
Eruptions and earthquakes

The first documented eruption on the Juan de Fuca Ridge took place on the Cleft segment in 1986 and 1987. Hydrothermal megaplumes indicated a large rifting event, releasing hydrothermal fluids as a result of lavas being extruded from a
dike. A majority of the eruptions along the ridge are dike injection events, where molten rock is extruded between cracks in the crust's
sheeted dike layer. Typically eruptive events can be predicted, as they are preceded by large earthquake swarms in the region.
A significant event took place in June 1993, lasting 24 days at the CoAxial segment. Cruises deployed as a result of the eruption sampled event plumes, cooling lava flows, and discovered microbial communities living on the seafloor around the ridge.
In February 1996, an event consisting of 4,093 earthquakes, lasting 34 days was recorded at the Axial Volcano, yielding similar scientific results to the 1993 eruption.
In January 1998 an event consisting of 8,247 earthquakes lasted 11 days at Axial Seamount.
Lava was released from the caldera of the volcano, flowing down the southern side of the mountain, creating a sheet flow over 3 km long and 800m wide. This was the first time an underwater eruption had been monitored in-situ in real-time.
In June 1999, 1,863 earthquakes were recorded over 5 days, and a hydrothermal temperature increase was observed at the Main Endeavour segment.
In September 2001, 14,215 earthquakes were detected over a 25-day period in the Middle Valley segment.
Researchers at Oregon State University suggested the Axial Seamount had an eruption interval of approximately 16 years, which would place the next major Axial eruption in 2014. In 2011, during a dive on the seamount, new lava flows were discovered and some instruments had been buried in lava flows, indicating the volcano had erupted since the last expedition to the ridge. This is considered the first successful forecast of a seamount eruption. The caldera floor dropped by more than 2 meters after the eruption, and the rate at which it inflates as Axial's magma chamber refills can be used to once again predict the next eruption.
Tectonic activity
The ridge is a medium rate spreading center, moving outwards at a rate of approximately per year.
Tectonic activity along the ridge is monitored primarily with the U.S. Navy's Sound Surveillance System (SOSUS) array of hydrophones, allowing for real time detection of earthquakes and eruptive events.
The
Juan de Fuca Plate is being pushed east underneath the North American Plate, forming what is known as the
Cascadia subduction zone off the coast of the Pacific Northwest. The plate does not subduct smoothly and can become 'locked' with the North American plate. When this happens,
strain builds up until the contact suddenly slips, triggering
massive earthquakes up to or greater than
magnitude 9. Major earthquakes along this zone occur on average every 550 years and can have major impacts on the physical structure of the North American continent and seafloor.
See also
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Accretion (geology)
In geology, accretion is a process by which material is added to a tectonic plate at a subduction zone, frequently on the edge of existing continental landmasses. The added material may be sediment, volcanic arcs, seamounts, oceanic crust o ...
*
Axial Seamount
Axial Seamount (also Coaxial Seamount or Axial Volcano) is a seamount, submarine volcano, and underwater shield volcano in the Pacific Ocean, located on the Juan de Fuca Ridge, approximately west of Cannon Beach, Oregon. Standing high, Axial S ...
*
Cascadia Channel
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Explorer Ridge
*
Forearc
A forearc is a region in a subduction zone between an oceanic trench and the associated volcanic arc. Forearc regions are present along convergent margins and eponymously form 'in front of' the volcanic arcs that are characteristic of convergen ...
*
Geology of the Pacific Northwest
*
Gorda Ridge
*
Overlapping spreading centers
References
External links
Cascadia tectonic history
{{Authority control
Geology of British Columbia
Underwater ridges of the Pacific Ocean
Geology of Washington (state)
West Coast of Vancouver Island
Oceanography of Canada