LEG 187
AUSTRALIAN-ANTARCTIC DISCORDANCE:
MANTLE RESERVOIRS AND MIGRATION ASSOCIATED
WITH AUSTRALIAN-ANTARCTIC RIFTING
Modified by David Christie from Proposal 426 Submitted by:
D.M. Christie, D.G. Pyle, B.P. West, and A.J. Crawford
Staff Scientist: TBN --- Co-Chief Scientists: TBN
ABSTRACT
The Australian-Antarctic Discordance (AAD) is an anomalously deep region centered on the
Southeast Indian Ridge (SEIR) between Australia and Antarctica. Among its unique features is an
unusually sharp boundary between the ocean-basin scale, upper mantle isotopic domains of the
Pacific and Indian Oceans. This boundary has migrated westward into and across the easternmost
segment of the AAD at a rate of 25-40 mm/yr during the last 4 m.y., yet the long-term relationship
of this important boundary to the AAD, itself, remains unclear. There is limited evidence to
suggest that the boundary has been migrating westward for approximately 40 m.y., since the
separation of the South Tasman Rise from Antarctica. On the other hand, it seems likely, perhaps
even probable, that the isotopic boundary is genetically linked to the mantle processes that have
maintained the existence of the AAD for >90 m.y., since Australia and Antarctica first rifted apart.
The long-term configuration and dynamic history of the isotopic boundary can be determined by
systematic off-axis sampling, beyond the limit of effective dredging (~7 Ma). During Leg 187, we
will extend the sampling program to older crust, between 10 and 30 Ma. An array of 19 drill sites
has been designed to determine the configuration of the isotopic boundary and to distinguish
among competing hypotheses concerning the nature and extent of mantle migration beneath the
SEIR. Approximately 10-12 single-bit holes will sample 20-100 m (ideally about 50 m) into
igneous basement. A reactive drilling strategy will allow the selection of later sites within a few
hours of core recovery on the basis of trace element data obtained from the earlier sites.
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