Although the emphasis on research at ocean ridges over the past 4 years has
been on multi-disciplinary approaches, at the time of this report, truly multidisciplinary
studies are
just beginning to reach publication stage. Michael et al. [1994]
presented a
multidisciplinary study of the mid-Atlantic ridge at 31
-34
S that
integrates
topographic, gravity, and geochemical data to investigate the dynamic
evolution of this
segment of the MAR. This segment displays ridge crest anomalies including
shallowing by
1500 m, the near-disappearance of the axial valley, the occurrence of a
prominent bullseye
gravity low centered over the shallow summit, and spikes in the incompatible
element and
radiogenic isotope ratios centered on the summit. Michael et al.
[1994] used the
combined geochemical and geophysical evidence to infer that the ridge-crest
anomalies are
related to interaction of the ridge with a passively embedded chemical
heterogeneity in
the mantle. Barth et al. [1994] combined reflection seismic,
photographic,
geochemical, and sea-floor imaging data to study the origin of bathymetric
highs at ridge-transform intersections (RTI), using the Clipperton fracture zone as a study
area. Their
results suggest that the RTIs at the Clipperton fracture zone are maintained
by the
constant interplay between intruding ridge magma and the disrupting
transform fault
motion.