Abstract
The nature of back-arc extension in the East Scotia Sea is re-examined with the use of an enlarged geophysical data set. Well developed oceanic magnetic lineations confirm that the present spreading episode started about 8 Ma ago, that spreading is asymmetric, and that the total rate increased from 50 to 70 m m /a about 1.5 Ma ago. Most of the currently active South Sandwich volcanic island arc lies upon ocean floor only 6-8 M a old and generated at the current spreading ridge. Subsequent extension has not modified the curvature of the arc. East-west magnetic lineations of Miocene age in the Central Scotia Sea and contemporaneous low-K arc tholeiites dredged from the eastern South Scotia Ridge (Discovery Bank) indicate a regime of coupled subduction and back-arc extension preceding that occurring now. A speculative model involving a series of collisions of parts of this earlier Discovery trench with ridge crest sections of the South American-Antarctic plate boundary explains the transformation of this earlier regime into the present, self-contained Sandwich plate regime. The considerable small-scale variability observed in the back-arc region may be seen as an inevitable consequence of the action of the ridge-trench collision mechanism. The entire Scotia Sea could have formed by a similar kind of back-arc extensional modification of the South American-Antarctic plate boundary.
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