RHUM RUM Imaging a mantle plume under the hotspot of La Réunion
RHUM-RUM is a seismological experiment designed to image an oceanic mantle plume – or lack of plume – from crust to core beneath La Réunion Island, and to understand these results in terms of material and heat flows. The Réunion h...
ver más
¿Tienes un proyecto y buscas un partner? Gracias a nuestro motor inteligente podemos recomendarte los mejores socios y ponerte en contacto con ellos. Te lo explicamos en este video
Proyectos interesantes
CCMP
Physics Of Magma Propagation and Emplacement a multi method...
2M€
Cerrado
SAPHERE
Seismic Signature of Plumes and the Heat Budget of Earth s M...
173K€
Cerrado
TRANSCALE
Reconciling Scales in Global Seimology
1M€
Cerrado
JCI-2010-06092
Understanding magma chamber processes and magma rheology: Ap...
101K€
Cerrado
SAMS
Seismic Anisotropy and Magma Systems
231K€
Cerrado
UPFLOW
Upward mantle flow from novel seismic observations
3M€
Cerrado
Fecha límite de participación
Sin fecha límite de participación.
Descripción del proyecto
RHUM-RUM is a seismological experiment designed to image an oceanic mantle plume – or lack of plume – from crust to core beneath La Réunion Island, and to understand these results in terms of material and heat flows. The Réunion hotspot is one of the most active volcanoes in the world, and its hotspot track leads to the Deccan Traps of India, one of the largest flood basalt provinces on Earth, which erupted 65 Ma ago. The genesis and the origin at depth of this mantle upwelling are controversial, and La Réunion stands exemplarily for the entire class of hotspot-type volcanism that occurs mostly in the world's oceans, far removed from plate boundaries. It remains unclear whether oceanic hotspots are fed by deep mantle plumes, and whether plumes are significant contributors to the solid earth's heat budget.
Since 2011, we have deployed 57 broadband seismometers on the ocean floor, complemented by 37 seismic stations on the surrounding land masses of Madagascar, Mauritius, the Seychelles, and the Iles Eparses. RHUM-RUM is a French-German cooperative effort that pools the marine resources, funding, scientific expertise, and local infrastructure needed to realise this large experiment. Thus RHUM-RUM has become the largest effort worldwide to image a plume under an oceanic hotspot.
As the German PI of RHUM-RUM, I am in danger of losing previously raised German funding for the data analysis stage, as I am about to move from Munich to Oxford. The Career Integration Grant can help me facilitate the mobility of a postdoctoral associate and a PhD student to enable the close collaboration and supervision originally intended. My research project will use the most advanced methods of waveform tomography – several of which were developed by me and my group – to turn the RHUM-RUM waveform data set into 3-D body-wave tomographies that image through the entire mantle column under La Réunion, in order to shed light on the hotspot’s long-lived heat source.