Limalok
Cretaceous-Paleocene guyot in the Marshall Islands / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Limalok (formerly known as Harrie or Harriet) is a Cretaceous[lower-alpha 1]-Paleocene[lower-alpha 2] guyot/tablemount in the southeastern Marshall Islands, one of a number of seamounts (a type of underwater volcanic mountain) in the Pacific Ocean. It was probably formed by a volcanic hotspot in present-day French Polynesia. Limalok lies southeast of Mili Atoll and Knox Atoll, which rise above sea level, and is joined to each of them through a volcanic ridge. It is located at a depth of 1,255 metres (4,117 ft) and has a summit platform with an area of 636 square kilometres (246 sq mi).
Limalok | |
---|---|
Summit depth | 1,255 metres (4,117 ft) |
Summit area | 636-square-kilometre (246 sq mi) |
Location | |
Group | Ratak Chain |
Coordinates | 5.6°N 172.3°E / 5.6; 172.3[1] |
Country | Marshall Islands |
Geology | |
Type | Guyot |
Age of rock | Cretaceous |
Limalok is formed by basaltic rocks and was probably a shield volcano at first; the Macdonald, Rarotonga, Rurutu and Society hotspots may have been involved in its formation. After volcanic activity ceased, the volcano was eroded and thereby flattened, and a carbonate platform formed on it during the Paleocene and Eocene. These carbonates were chiefly produced by red algae, forming an atoll or atoll-like structure with reefs.
The platform sank below sea level 48 ± 2 million years ago during the Eocene, perhaps because it moved through the equatorial area, which was too hot or nutrient-rich to support the growth of a coral reef. Thermal subsidence lowered the drowned seamount to its present depth. After a hiatus lasting into the Miocene,[lower-alpha 3] sedimentation commenced on the seamount leading to the deposition of manganese crusts and pelagic sediments; phosphate accumulated in some sediments over time.