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Scientists have discovered the world's longest known chain of continental1 volcanoes, running 2,000 kilometres across Australia, from the Whitsundays in North Queensland to near Melbourne in central Victoria. The volcanic2 chain was created over the past 33 million years, as Australia moved northwards over a hotspot in the Earth's mantle3, said leader of the research Dr Rhodri Davies from The Australian National University (ANU).
"We realised that the same hotspot had caused volcanoes in the Whitsundays and the central Victoria region, and also some rare features in New South Wales, roughly halfway4 between them," said Dr Davies, from the ANU Research School of Earth Sciences.
"The track is nearly three times the length of the famous Yellowstone hotspot track on the North American continent," said Dr Davies.
This kind of volcanic activity is surprising because it occurs away from tectonic plate boundaries, where most volcanoes are found. These hotspots are thought to form above mantle plumes6, narrow upwellings of hot rock that originate at Earth's core-mantle boundary almost 3,000 kilometres below the surface.
The study, published in Nature, found that sections of the track have no volcanic activity because the Australian continent is too thick to allow the hot rock in mantle plumes to rise close enough to the Earth's surface for it to melt and form magma.
The research found that the plume5 created volcanic activity only where Earth's solid outer layer, called the lithosphere7, is thinner than 130 kilometres.
These new findings will help scientists to understand volcanism on other continents and from earlier periods in Earth's history, said co-author Dr Nick Rawlinson, now at the University of Aberdeen's School of Geosciences.
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