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Hot Spotting

Hot Spotting a new method presented by Paul Wessel and Loren W Kroenke at a recent meeting of the American Geophysical Union offers a way to locate hot spots under the ocean more easily and precisely than ever before ( Scientific American, Vol 276, No 4).

Described as hot-spotting, the technique depends on a new appreciation of some basic geometry. Previously, geologists required the age of various volcanoes created by a hot spot to determine its position. By studying the past motions of the overlying plate relative to fixed hot spots, they could trace backward along a chain of volcanoes and project to the site of rising magma. But doing so for an oceanic plate is a challenge, because ascertaining the ages of dormant, submerged volcanoes (seamounts) is plagued with difficulties

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