Hotspots are formed when
magma from the lower
mantle upwells to the
crust and breaks through the surface, whether that be
oceanic crust or
continental. This movement of magma breaks through the
upper mantle, or the
lithosphere, and creates a volcanic spot. This does not mean that all volcanoes are hotspots; some are created through interactions at plate boundaries. Tectonic plates move over hotspots creating a chain of volcanically-formed mountains over time. This is supported by the theory of
plate tectonics. The peaks and mountains left behind are no longer active volcanoes. Hotspots do not necessarily occur on a
plate boundary, though the Cobb Hotspot does.
Comparisons with mid-ocean ridge basalts The magmas from the
spreading ridge and the hotspot have differences. For one, they contain dissimilar concentrations of compounds like
Na2O,
CaO, and
Sr at a given
mafic level. This difference highlights that the magmas were formed at different depths in the mantle. It is theorized that the hotspot magma was melted deeper than that of the ridge. For these two masses of magma to exist, the magma at the Cobb Hotspot must be particularly hot. It is undetermined whether the hotspot was created from mantle-core boundary convection, as the end of the chain is subducting under another. The initial plume of magma would leave behind geologic evidence at the surface, but due to the consumption of the older end of the chain, this evidence is not visible.
Variations along the chain Trace elements were used to discover that older mounts created by the Cobb Hotspot contained more minerals like
olivine and
augite, both
mafic minerals. Younger mounts created by the hotspot contain more minerals like calcic
plagioclase, augite, and
pigeonite; they contain little to no olivine. These characteristics found at the younger mounts are like those found in
basalts recovered from the
Juan de Fuca Ridge. It is inferred that much of the difference in basalt composition along the chain is due to the time-dependent distance between hotspot and ridge. Oceanic crust thickens with distance from the mid-ocean ridge at which it originated. Therefore, as the
Pacific plate migrated, the magma from the Cobb hotspot interacted with different thicknesses of crust. A thicker ocean crust would result in more differentiated basalt, while thinner crusts, like those at the current hotspot location, create less differentiated magma. == Interaction of the Cobb hotspot and the Juan de Fuca Ridge ==