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VOLCANIC ARC

(Redirected from Island arc)
Mariana Islands, an oceanic island arc

Cascade Volcanic Arc, a continental volcanic arc

A 'volcanic arc' is chain of volcanic islands or mountains formed by plate tectonics as an oceanic tectonic plate subducts under another tectonic plate and produces magma. There are two types of volcanic arcs: oceanic arcs (commonly called 'island arcs', a type of archipelago) and continental arcs. In the former, oceanic crust subducts beneath other oceanic crust on an adjacent plate, while in the latter case the oceanic crust subducts beneath continental crust. In some situations, a single subduction zone may show both aspects along its length, as part of a plate subducts beneath a continent and part beneath adjacent oceanic crust.
Two classic examples of oceanic island arcs are the Mariana Islands in the western Pacific Ocean and the Lesser Antilles in the western Atlantic Ocean. The Cascade Volcanic Arc in western North America and the Andes along the western edge of South America are examples of continental volcanic arcs. The best examples of volcanic arcs with both sets of characteristics are in the North Pacific, with the Aleutian Arc consisting of the Aleutian Islands and their extension the Aleutian Range on the Alaska Peninsula, and the Kuril-Kamchatka Arc comprising the Kuril Islands and southern Kamchatka Peninsula.

Contents
Petrology
Examples
Continental arcs
Island arcs
Ancient Island arcs
See also
References

Petrology


In the subduction zone, loss of volatiles from the subducted slab induces partial melting of the overriding mantle and generates low-density, calc-alkaline magma that buoyantly rises to intrude and be extruded through the lithosphere of the overriding plate.
On the subducting side of the island arc is a deep and narrow oceanic trench, which is the trace at the Earth’s surface of the boundary between the downgoing and overriding plates. This trench is created by the gravitational pull of the relatively dense subducting plate pulling the leading edge of the plate downward. Multiple earthquakes occur along this subduction boundary with the seismic hypocenters located at increasing depth under the island arc: these quakes define the Wadati-Benioff zones.
Oceans basins that are being reduced by subduction are called 'remnant oceans' as they will slowly be shrunken out of existence and crushed in the subsequent orogenic collision. This process has happened over and over in the geologic history of the Earth.
The Aleutian Arc, with both oceanic and continental parts.

Examples


Continental arcs


Cascade Volcanic Arc

Alaska Peninsula and Aleutian Range

Kamchatka

Andes
Island arcs


Aleutian Islands

Kuril Islands

Japan and Ryukyu Islands

Izu Islands and Bonin Islands

Philippines

Mariana Islands

Tonga and Kermadec Islands

Ogasawara Islands

Crete and Dodecanese

Andaman and Nicobar Islands

Mentawai Islands

Sunda Arc

Lesser Sunda Islands

Tanimbar and Kai Islands

Solomon Islands

Lesser Antilles, including the Leeward Antilles

South Sandwich Islands
Ancient Island arcs


Insular Islands

Intermontane Islands

See also



Back-arc basin

Volcanic belt

References



Subduction Zone Volcanism

Tectonics and Volcanoes of Japan

USGS: Island-Arc, Oceanic, and Continental Volcanoes

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