The Pleiades are a
volcanic group in northern
Victoria Land of
Antarctica. It consists of youthful
cones and
domes with
Mount Atlas/
Mount Pleiones
The Pleiades are a volcanic group in northern Victoria Land of Antarctica. It consists of youthful cones and domes with Mount Atlas/ Mount Pleiones, a small stratovolcano formed by three overlapping cones, being the dominant volcano and rising ...
, a small
stratovolcano
A stratovolcano, also known as a composite volcano, is a conical volcano built up by many layers (strata) of hardened lava and tephra. Unlike shield volcanoes, stratovolcanoes are characterized by a steep profile with a summit crater and per ...
formed by three overlapping cones, being the dominant volcano and rising above the
Evans Névé plateau. Two other named cones are
Alcyone Cone
The Pleiades are a volcanic group in northern Victoria Land of Antarctica. It consists of youthful cones and domes with Mount Atlas/Mount Pleiones, a small stratovolcano formed by three overlapping cones, being the dominant volcano and rising ...
and
Taygete Cone
The Pleiades are a volcanic group in northern Victoria Land of Antarctica. It consists of youthful cones and domes with Mount Atlas/ Mount Pleiones, a small stratovolcano formed by three overlapping cones, being the dominant volcano and rising ...
, the latter of which has been
radiometrically dated
Radiometric dating, radioactive dating or radioisotope dating is a technique which is used to date materials such as rocks or carbon, in which trace radioactive impurities were selectively incorporated when they were formed. The method compares t ...
to have erupted during the
Holocene. A number of
tephra layers across Antarctica have been attributed to eruptions of this volcanic group, including several that may have occurred within the last few hundred years.
Geography and geomorphology
The Pleiades are located at the crest of the
Transantarctic Mountains,
[Stump 1986, p.305] [Kyle 1982, p.747][Faure and Mensing 2011, p.549] away from the coast of
Lady Newnes Bay Lady Newnes Bay is a bay about 60 mi long in the western Ross Sea, extending along the coast of Victoria Land from Cape Sibbald to Coulman Island. Discovered by the British Antarctic Expedition, 1898–1900, led by Carstens Borchgrevink. He n ...
,
Ross Sea.
[Kyle 1982, p.748] The volcanoes are located between
Evans Neve and the beginning of
Mariner Glacier
Mariner Glacier is a major glacier over long, descending southeast from the plateau of Victoria Land, between Mountaineer Range and Malta Plateau, and terminating at Lady Newnes Bay, Ross Sea, where it forms the floating Mariner Glacier Tongue. ...
,
which drains Evans Neve southeastwards towards the Ross Sea.
The volcanic group is named after the
Pleiades star cluster
Star clusters are large groups of stars. Two main types of star clusters can be distinguished: globular clusters are tight groups of ten thousand to millions of old stars which are gravitationally bound, while open clusters are more loosely clust ...
in the constellation
Taurus; the name was assigned to them by the
New Zealand Geological Survey Antarctic Expedition.
The volcanic group is formed by several steep,
[Riddolls and Hancox, 1968 p.897] small volcanic cones and
lava dome
In volcanology, a lava dome is a circular mound-shaped protrusion resulting from the slow extrusion of viscous lava from a volcano. Dome-building eruptions are common, particularly in convergent plate boundary settings. Around 6% of eruptions on ...
s that
emerge from the ice of Evans Neve
[LeMasurier ''et al.'' 1990, p.60] over a long area. Most are nameless with the exception of the central
Taygete Cone
The Pleiades are a volcanic group in northern Victoria Land of Antarctica. It consists of youthful cones and domes with Mount Atlas/ Mount Pleiones, a small stratovolcano formed by three overlapping cones, being the dominant volcano and rising ...
,
Alcyone Cone
The Pleiades are a volcanic group in northern Victoria Land of Antarctica. It consists of youthful cones and domes with Mount Atlas/Mount Pleiones, a small stratovolcano formed by three overlapping cones, being the dominant volcano and rising ...
just south of Taygete and the pair of high
Mount Pleiones
The Pleiades are a volcanic group in northern Victoria Land of Antarctica. It consists of youthful cones and domes with Mount Atlas/ Mount Pleiones, a small stratovolcano formed by three overlapping cones, being the dominant volcano and rising ...
and c. high
Mount Atlas in the southern sector.
[Kyle 1982, p.749] Mount Atlas and Mount Pleiones form a compound
stratovolcano
A stratovolcano, also known as a composite volcano, is a conical volcano built up by many layers (strata) of hardened lava and tephra. Unlike shield volcanoes, stratovolcanoes are characterized by a steep profile with a summit crater and per ...
[Kim ''et al.'' 2019, p.120] which is the principal volcano of The Pleiades.
Mount Atlas is formed by three separate cones that rise above the ice.
Dykes,
lava and
scoria flows are found on these cones, the youngest of which has a semicircular crater.
and
scoria cone
Scoria is a pyroclastic, highly vesicular, dark-colored volcanic rock that was ejected from a volcano as a molten blob and cooled in the air to form discrete grains or clasts.Neuendorf, K.K.E., J.P. Mehl, Jr., and J.A. Jackson, eds. (2005) ''G ...
s dot its flanks.
At the foot of Mount Atlas are
moraine
A moraine is any accumulation of unconsolidated debris (regolith and rock), sometimes referred to as glacial till, that occurs in both currently and formerly glaciated regions, and that has been previously carried along by a glacier or ice shee ...
s with the form of ridges
and there are moraines within one of its craters as well. The summit of Mount Pleiones features nested craters.
Alcyone Cone lies north of Mount Atlas.
It is only slightly lower than Mount Atlas but is much smaller. It has two poorly defined craters and consists of lava flows covered with
scree and
volcanic bombs when not buried under snow.
Taygete Cone north of Mount Atlas
appears to be a
lava dome
In volcanology, a lava dome is a circular mound-shaped protrusion resulting from the slow extrusion of viscous lava from a volcano. Dome-building eruptions are common, particularly in convergent plate boundary settings. Around 6% of eruptions on ...
bearing traces of
hydrothermal alteration and of a small crater.
[Kyle 1982, p.750] Apart from the lava flows which make up most of Mount Atlas,
[Esser and Kyle 2002, p.415] pyroclastic
Pyroclastic rocks (derived from the el, πῦρ, links=no, meaning fire; and , meaning broken) are clastic rocks composed of rock fragments produced and ejected by explosive volcanic eruptions. The individual rock fragments are known as pyroc ...
rocks have been encountered at The Pleiades.
The other cones are partly buried by snow and some have breached or otherwise eroded craters.
[Kyle 1982, p.751]
The volcanoes have alternatively been described as eroded
or uneroded.
The young appearance of the edifices indicates a young age of The Pleiades volcanoes.
The volcanoes have been prospected for the possibility to generate
geothermal energy
Geothermal energy is the thermal energy in the Earth's crust which originates from the formation of the planet and from radioactive decay of materials in currently uncertain but possibly roughly equal proportions. The high temperature and pres ...
but the presence of a good heat source is unlikely. An aeromagnetic anomaly has been correlated to the volcano group. The cones form an arcuate alignment that might reflect the existence of a wide caldera to their southeast.
Geology
The Pleiades belong to the
McMurdo Volcanic Group
The McMurdo Volcanic Group is a large group of Cenozoic volcanic rocks in the western Ross Sea and central Transantarctic Mountains areas of Antarctica. It is one of the largest provinces of alkaline volcanism in the world, having formed as a res ...
and more specifically to the Melbourne volcanic province, which extends from
Mount Melbourne to The Pleiades and
Malta Plateau Malta Plateau () is an ice-covered plateau of about extent in the Victory Mountains of Victoria Land, Antarctica. The plateau is irregular in shape and is bounded on the south and west by Mariner Glacier, on the north by tributaries to Trafalgar ...
.
These consist of the
Cenozoic
The Cenozoic ( ; ) is Earth's current geological era, representing the last 66million years of Earth's history. It is characterised by the dominance of mammals, birds and flowering plants, a cooling and drying climate, and the current configura ...
volcanoes of northern
Victoria Land which form alignments and lineaments possibly controlled by deep fractures, and which are subdivided into a "Central Suite" consisting of large
stratovolcano
A stratovolcano, also known as a composite volcano, is a conical volcano built up by many layers (strata) of hardened lava and tephra. Unlike shield volcanoes, stratovolcanoes are characterized by a steep profile with a summit crater and per ...
es and a "Local Suite" consisting of other volcanic centres. Among the volcanoes of the McMurdo Volcanic Group are the large volcanoes
Mount Overlord
Mount Overlord is a very large mountain which is an extinct stratovolcano, situated at the northwest limit of Deception Plateau, 50 miles inland from the Ross Sea and just east of the head of Aviator Glacier in Victoria Land. Its asymmetrical c ...
,
Mount Melbourne and in the area of The Pleiades the
Malta Plateau Malta Plateau () is an ice-covered plateau of about extent in the Victory Mountains of Victoria Land, Antarctica. The plateau is irregular in shape and is bounded on the south and west by Mariner Glacier, on the north by tributaries to Trafalgar ...
.
Volcanic activity began about 107 million years ago. Earlier volcanic activity began during the
Cretaceous, when the
West Antarctic Rift System became active.
[Kim ''et al.'' 2019, p.119]
The
crust under the volcanic field is about thick. The
basement
A basement or cellar is one or more floors of a building that are completely or partly below the ground floor. It generally is used as a utility space for a building, where such items as the furnace, water heater, breaker panel or fuse box, ...
underneath the volcanoes consists of
Precambrian
The Precambrian (or Pre-Cambrian, sometimes abbreviated pꞒ, or Cryptozoic) is the earliest part of Earth's history, set before the current Phanerozoic Eon. The Precambrian is so named because it preceded the Cambrian, the first period of the ...
and
Paleozoic sedimentary and
intrusive rocks. The former are mostly represented by the
Bowers Group/
Bowers Supergroup and the
Robertson Bay Group north of the volcanic complex and the latter by the
Granite Harbour and
Admiralty Intrusives mostly south of the volcanic complex. A major local
fault system passes northeast of the volcanoes
[Riddolls and Hancox, 1968 p.884] and roughly follows the path of the Mariner Glacier,
while the Lanternman Fault passes southwest of them.
Some of these faults formed during the
Ross Orogeny
The Ross orogeny was a mountain building event in Antarctica in the early Paleozoic. The ancestral (also termed proto-) Trans-Antarctic Mountains were uplifted earlier by the Beardmore orogeny but had eroded as a broad epicratonic sea flooded mu ...
, when three
terranes collided to form northern Victoria Land;
[Kim ''et al.'' 2019, p.118] The Pleiades are located on the
Bowers Terrane.
Faults may also govern the position of The Pleiades volcanoes.
Composition
Basanite
Basanite () is an igneous, volcanic (extrusive) rock with aphanitic to porphyritic texture. It is composed mostly of feldspathoids, pyroxenes, olivine, and plagioclase and forms from magma low in silica and enriched in alkali metal oxides that s ...
,
basalt,
benmoreite,
hawaiite,
phonolite
Phonolite is an uncommon extrusive rock, of intermediate chemical composition between felsic and mafic, with texture ranging from aphanitic (fine-grained) to porphyritic (mixed fine- and coarse-grained). Phonolite is a variation of the igneous ...
,
trachyandesite,
trachyte and
tristanite have been recovered from The Pleiades. These volcanic rocks define two separate sodium and potassium-rich magma suites and may originate from separate levels of the same
magma chamber,
[Kyle 1982, p.749,751] different depths or through
fractional crystallization Fractional crystallization may refer to:
* Fractional crystallization (chemistry), a process to separate different solutes from a solution
* Fractional crystallization (geology)
Fractional crystallization, or crystal fractionation, is one of the ...
.
Ultimately, these magmas originate from a
metasomatized mantle
A mantle is a piece of clothing, a type of cloak. Several other meanings are derived from that.
Mantle may refer to:
*Mantle (clothing), a cloak-like garment worn mainly by women as fashionable outerwear
**Mantle (vesture), an Eastern Orthodox ve ...
and were altered through assimilation of
crustal material as they ascended. Overall, these volcanic rocks define one of the most complete magmatic series of the McMurdo Volcanic Group. It is possible that the volcanoes first erupted trachyte and later basalts,
but later findings indicate that the two suites were erupted simultaneously.
Phenocrysts include
anorthoclase,
apatite
Apatite is a group of phosphate minerals, usually hydroxyapatite, fluorapatite and chlorapatite, with high concentrations of OH−, F− and Cl− ions, respectively, in the crystal. The formula of the admixture of the three most common e ...
,
augite
Augite is a common rock-forming pyroxene mineral with formula . The crystals are monoclinic and prismatic. Augite has two prominent cleavages, meeting at angles near 90 degrees.
Characteristics
Augite is a solid solution in the pyroxene group. ...
,
biotite
Biotite is a common group of phyllosilicate minerals within the mica group, with the approximate chemical formula . It is primarily a solid-solution series between the iron-endmember annite, and the magnesium-endmember phlogopite; more alumino ...
,
kaersutite
Kaersutite is a dark brown to black double chain calcic titanium bearing amphibole mineral with formula: NaCa2(Mg3Ti4+Al)(Si6Al2)O22(OH)2.
Ferro-kaersutite is the divalent iron rich endmember of the kaersutite group, with the iron replacing ma ...
,
magnetite,
oligoclase and
olivine, and are distinct between the sodic and potassic rocks.
Essexite,
granodiorite,
granite and
syenite
Syenite is a coarse-grained intrusive igneous rock with a general composition similar to that of granite, but deficient in quartz, which, if present at all, occurs in relatively small concentrations (< 5%). Some syenites contain larger proport ...
xenoliths also occur.
Hydrothermal alteration at Taygete Cone has produced
hematite
Hematite (), also spelled as haematite, is a common iron oxide compound with the formula, Fe2O3 and is widely found in rocks and soils. Hematite crystals belong to the rhombohedral lattice system which is designated the alpha polymorph of . ...
and
sulfur
Sulfur (or sulphur in British English) is a chemical element with the symbol S and atomic number 16. It is abundant, multivalent and nonmetallic. Under normal conditions, sulfur atoms form cyclic octatomic molecules with a chemical formula ...
which coat and stain bleached trachyte.
Eruption history
The oldest dated rocks are 847,000 ± 12,000 years old. Eruptions took place about 825,000 years ago and emplaced trachytes in the central part of the field; even older eruptions may have occurred but are now buried underneath of snow and ice. Three more eruptions occurred in the subsequent 700,000 years before activity began to increase after 100,000 years.
[Esser and Kyle 2002, p.417] Potassium-argon dating has yielded imprecise ages of 40,000 ± 50,000 for Mount Atlas and 20,000 ± 40,000 and 12,000 ± 40,000 for other volcanic cones.
Later
argon-argon dating has yielded ages of less than 100,000 years for lavas on Mount Atlas
and for a lava east of Taygete, and ages of about 45,000 years for Alcyone and two more lava flows on Mount Atlas.
[Esser and Kyle 2002, p.418] The Pleiones-Atlas complex may have last erupted 20,000 ± 7,000 years ago.
Tephra deposits have been found in
Antarctica which may originate at The Pleiades. These include:
*
Eemian
The Eemian (also called the last interglacial, Sangamonian, Sangamonian Stage, Ipswichian, Mikulin, Kaydaky, penultimate,NOAA - Penultimate Interglacial Period http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/global-warming/penultimate-interglacial-period Valdivia or Ri ...
-age tephras in
Taylor Glacier and
Talos Dome
Talos Dome () (sometimes spelled Thalos Dome) is a large ice dome rising to 2,300 m to the southwest of the Usarp Mountains in Antarctica. The dome overlies the east margin of the Wilkes Subglacial Basin. The feature was delineated by the Scot ...
, although some of the latter may originate at
Mount Rittmann
Mount Rittmann is a volcano in Antarctica. Discovered in 1988–1989 by an Italian expedition, it was named after the volcanologist Alfred Rittmann (1893–1980). It features a or wide caldera which crops out from underneath the Aviator Glacie ...
instead.
* One tephra layer emplaced about 50,000 years ago at a
blue-ice area
A blue-ice area is an ice-covered area of Antarctica where wind-driven snow transport and sublimation result in net mass loss from the ice surface in the absence of melting, forming a blue surface that contrasts with the more common white Anta ...
at
Frontier Mountain
Outback Nunataks () is a series of bare rock nunataks and mountains which are distributed over an area about long by wide. The group lies south of Emlen Peaks of the Usarp Mountains and west of Monument Nunataks and upper Rennick Glacier, adja ...
.
*Several tens of thousands of years old tephra layers at
Lewis Cliff/
Beardmore Glacier
The Beardmore Glacier in Antarctica is one of the largest valley glaciers in the world, being long and having a width of . It descends about from the Antarctic Plateau to the Ross Ice Shelf and is bordered by the Commonwealth Range of the Queen ...
probably originate at The Pleiades.
* 26,00022,000 years old
tephra in the Ross Sea, which was emplaced when part of the Ross Sea was ice-free.
* 16,00015,000 years old tephra layers in Talos Dome.
* Tephra layers at
Hercules Neve and Talos Dome, of probably Holocene age.
* A
volcanic glass layer at
Siple Dome dated to 12861292
AD. A tephra layer from 1254 AD was later correlated to
Mount Rittmann
Mount Rittmann is a volcano in Antarctica. Discovered in 1988–1989 by an Italian expedition, it was named after the volcanologist Alfred Rittmann (1893–1980). It features a or wide caldera which crops out from underneath the Aviator Glacie ...
.
* Tephras in
ice core
An ice core is a core sample that is typically removed from an ice sheet or a high mountain glacier. Since the ice forms from the incremental buildup of annual layers of snow, lower layers are older than upper ones, and an ice core contains ic ...
s that date to 17761885 AD, including one tephra layer at
Siple Dome dated to about 1809.
* Finally, a major eruption may have occurred either at The Pleiades or at Mount Melbourne between 1880–1980.
The youngest ages of 6,000 ± 6,000
and 3,000 ± 14,000 years ago have been obtained on Taygete,
which together with the youthful texture of this dome
indicates a young age for The Pleiades, despite the imprecise dates.
The presence of
pumice lapilli
Lapilli is a size classification of tephra, which is material that falls out of the air during a volcanic eruption or during some meteorite impacts. ''Lapilli'' (singular: ''lapillus'') is Latin for "little stones".
By definition lapilli range f ...
has been taken as evidence of very recent activity in the form of a moderate pumice eruption. Presently, only minor
fumarolic activity has been reported.
Future eruptions are possible
and The Pleiades are not monitored, but they are also remote from any research station.
[Lee ''et al.'' 2019, p.175]
See also
*
List of volcanoes in Antarctica
References
Sources
*
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Pleiades, The
Stratovolcanoes
Volcanoes of Victoria Land
Active volcanoes
Pennell Coast