'World's largest volcano discovered beneath Pacific
The Tamu massif is comparable in size to Olympus Mons on Mars
Scientists
say that they have discovered the single largest volcano in the world, a
dead colossus deep beneath the Pacific waves.
A team writing in the journal Nature Geoscience says the
310,000 sq km (119,000 sq mi) Tamu Massif is comparable in size to Mars'
vast Olympus Mons volcano - the largest in the Solar System.
The structure topples the previous largest on Earth, Mauna Loa in Hawaii.
The massif lies some 2km below the sea.
It is located on an underwater plateau known as the Shatsky Rise, about 1,600km east of Japan.
It was formed about 145 million years ago when massive lava
flows erupted from the centre of the volcano to form a broad,
shield-like feature.
The researchers doubted the submerged volcano's peak ever
rose above sea level during its lifetime and say it is unlikely to erupt
again.
"The bottom line is that we think that Tamu Massif was built
in a short (geologically speaking) time of one to several million years
and it has been extinct since," co-author William Sager, from the
University of Houston, US, told the AFP news agency.
"One interesting angle is that there were lots of oceanic
plateaus (that) erupted during the Cretaceous Period (145-65 million
years ago) but we don't see them since. Scientists would like to know
why."
Prof Sager began studying the structure two decades ago, but
it had been unclear whether the massif was one single volcano or many - a
kind that exists in dozens of locations around the planet.
While Olympus Mons on Mars has relatively shallow roots, the Tamu Massif extends some 30 km (18 miles) into the Earth's crust.
And other volcanic behemoths could be lurking among the dozen or so large oceanic plateaux around the world, he thought.
"We don't have the data to see inside them and know their
structure, but it would not surprise me to find out that there are more
like Tamu out there," said Dr Sager.
"Indeed, the biggest oceanic plateau is Ontong Java plateau,
near the equator in the Pacific, east of the Solomon Islands. It is much
bigger than Tamu - it's the size of France."
The name Tamu comes from Texas A&M University, where Prof
Sager previously taught before moving to the University of Houston.