Trela, Jarek2017-04-222017-04-222017-04-21vt_gsexam:10029http://hdl.handle.net/10919/77438Mantle plumes are anomalously hot, narrow upwellings of mantle material that originate at the core-mantle boundary. As plumes rise they may form volumetrically large "heads" (~1000 km in diameter) with narrower (~100 km) "tails." Plume head melting is thought to form Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs), vast outpourings of basaltic lava (~106 km3), while plume tail melting forms linear chains of ocean island basalts (OIBs) similar the Emperor-Hawaii Seamount chain. Mantle plume derived melts indicate that these structures sample deep Earth geochemical and lithological heterogeneities. Studying plume-derived lavas can clarify important planetary-scale questions relating to the accretion of the Earth, primordial geochemical reservoirs, the fate of subducted materials, planetary differentiation, and convective mixing.ETDIn CopyrightGeologyGeochemistrymantle plumesolivinethermometrypetrologyhotspotsisotopesThe Evolution of the Galapagos Mantle Plume: From Large Igneous Province to Ocean Island BasaltDissertation