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Scientists say ‘superstructures’ exist on the seafloor


An undersea plateau in the Pacific Ocean that is bigger than Idaho first started forming with volcanic eruptions during the Cretaceous period (145 to 66 million years ago), and it is still growing today. 

In fact, the Melanesian Border Plateau, located east of the Solomon Islands, formed through four separate pulses of volcanism, all with different root causes, according to new research published Jan. 15 in the journal Earth and Planetary Science Letters

A size comparison of the Melanesian Border Plateau to the Pacific NW. (Image credit: Dr Kevin Conrad)

This timeline is important, because giant volcanic features under the ocean are often poorly understood,  said study leader Kevin Konrad, a geoscientist at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. In some cases, they form in a single flood of magma, in which case they’re known as large igneous provinces. These huge, long-lasting volcanic events are so dramatic that they often shift the climate and have been associated with mass extinctions. 

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