Magmatic Bundle
This Magmatic Bundle contains all the equipment and apparel skins to ready your survivors for the long journey ahead, once they escape The Forge. All Survivors Magmatic Chest As the survivors continue the battle, the fires of the Forge rage on. These flame-hardened warriors need to look the part. Also, according to the DST Shop in my country: The Magmatic Bundle is on sale for -25% which allows you to buy 18,330 Spools for 12.59€ (1455.63 Spools/€). It may be a good time to restock your spools for new skins or the new incoming characters.
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mag·ma
(măg′mə)n.pl.mag·ma·ta(-mä′tə) or mag·masmagma
(ˈmæɡmə) n, pl-masor-mata (-mətə)mag•ma
(ˈmæg mə)n., pl. -mas, -ma•ta (-mə tə)
mag·ma
(măg′mə)magma
magma
Noun | 1. | magma - molten rock in the earth's crust rock, stone - material consisting of the aggregate of minerals like those making up the Earth's crust; 'that mountain is solid rock'; 'stone is abundant in New England and there are many quarries' |
magma
[ˈmægmə]N (magmas or magmata (pl)) [ˈmægmətə] → magmammagma
mag·ma
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Magmatism is the emplacement of magma within and at the surface of the outer layers of a terrestrial planet, which solidifies as igneous rocks. It does so through magmatic activity or igneous activity, the production, intrusion and extrusion of magma or lava. Volcanism is the surface expression of magmatism.
Magmatism is one of the main processes responsible for mountain formation. The nature of magmatism depends on the tectonic setting.[1] For example, andesitic magmatism associated with the formation of island arcs at convergent plate boundaries or basaltic magmatism at mid-ocean ridges during sea-floor spreading at divergent plate boundaries.
On Earth, magma forms by partial melting of silicate rocks either in the mantle, continental or oceanic crust. Evidence for magmatic activity is usually found in the form of igneous rocks – rocks that have formed from magma.
Convergent boundaries[edit]
Magmatism is associated with all stages of the development of convergent plate boundaries, from the initiation of subduction through to continental collision and its immediate aftermath.[2]
Subduction-related[edit]
The subduction of oceanic crust, whether beneath oceanic or continental crust, is associated in almost all cases with partial melting of the overlying asthenosphere due to the addition of volatiles (especially water) expelled from the downgoing slab. Only when the slab fails to reach sufficient depth as in the earliest stages of subduction or where there are periods of flat-slab subduction that completely pinch out the asthenosphere, is magmatism absent. The magmatism is mostly calc-alkaline in type along a well-defined curvilinear magmatic arc. Only the volcanic parts of modern arcs are exposed at the surface and the understanding of the underlying magma chambers relies on geophysical methods. Ancient arc sequences that formed on continental crust or that have become accreted to continental crust are often deeply eroded and the plutonic equivalents of the arc volcanoes become exposed.
Collision-related[edit]
Continental collisions are accompanied by major crustal thickening, leading to heating and anatexis within the crust, generally in the form of peraluminous granitic intrusions.
Post-collision[edit]
Post-collisional magmatism is a result of decompression melting associated with isostatic rebound and possible extensional collapse of the thickened crust formed during the collision.[3]Slab detachment has also been proposed as a cause of late to post-collisional magmatism.
Divergent boundaries[edit]
The new crust that is formed at divergent boundaries within oceanic crust is almost entirely magmatic in origin.
Mid-ocean ridges[edit]
Mid-ocean ridge spreading centres are the sites of almost continuous magmatism. The basalts erupted at mid-ocean ridges are tholeiitic in character and result from the partial melting of upwelling asthenosphere. The composition of Mid-Ocean Ridge Basalts (MORB) shows little variation globally as they come from a mostly homogeneous source.[4]
Back-arc basins[edit]
Back-arc extension often leads to the formation of oceanic crust and relatively short-lived spreading centres. As the asthenosphere behind the arc has been partly affected by volatiles from the downgoing slab, the typical back-arc basin basalts are intermediate in character between MORB type basalts and IAB type basalts.[5]
Intraplate[edit]
Magmatic activity away from plate boundaries forms an important part of the magmatism on earth, including the largest magmatic events known, Large Igneous Provinces.
Hotspots[edit]
Dst Magmatic Bundle
Hotspots are sites of upwelling of relatively hot mantle, possibly associated with mantle plumes, that cause partial melting of the asthenosphere. This type of magmatism forms volcanic seamounts or oceanic islands when they become emergent. Over short geological timescales the hotspots appear to be fixed relative to one another, forming a reference frame against which plate motions can be measured. As tectonic plates move relative to a hotspot, the location of magmatic activity on the plate shifts, causing the development of time-progressive chains of volcanoes such as the Hawaiian–Emperor seamount chain. The main product of hotspot volcanoes are Ocean Island Basalts (OIB), which are distinct from MORB and IAB type basalts.
Where hotspots are developed beneath the continents the products are different, as the mantle-derived magmas cause melting of the continental crust, forming granitic magmas that reach the surface as rhyolites. The Yellowstone hotspot is an example of continental hotspot magmatism, which also displays time-progressive shifts in magmatic activity.
Rifts[edit]
Many continental rift zones are associated with magmatism due to upwelling of the asthenosphere as the lithosphere is thinned, which leads to decompression melting.[6] The magmatism is often bimodal in character as the mantle-derived basaltic magmas cause partial melting of the continental crust.
Magmatic Bundle Model
Large Igneous Provinces[edit]
Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs) are defined as 'mainly mafic (+ ultramafic) magmatic provinces with an areal extent >0.1 Mkm2 and igneous volume >0.1Mkm3, that have intraplate characteristics, and are emplaced in a short duration pulse or multiple pulses (less than 1–5 Ma) with a maximum duration of <c.50 Ma'.[7]
References[edit]
Magmatic Bundle Vs
- ^Wilson M. (2012). Igneous petrogenesis. Springer. pp. 3–12. ISBN9789401093880.
- ^Harris N.B.W.; Pearce J.A.; Tindle A.G. (1986). Coward M.P.; Ries A.C. (eds.). Geochemical characteristics of collision-zone magmatism. Collision Tectonics. Special Publications. 19. Geological Society, London. ISBN9780632012114.
- ^Zhao Z.F.; Zheng Y.F. (2009). 'Remelting of subducted continental lithosphere: Petrogenesis of Mesozoic magmatic rocks in the Dabie-Sulu orogenic belt'. Science in China Series D: Earth Sciences. 52 (9): 1295–1318. doi:10.1007/s11430-009-0134-8. S2CID128737689.
- ^Schubert G.; Turcotte D.L.; Olsen P. (2001). Mantle Convection in the Earth and Planets. Cambridge University Press. pp. 69–71. ISBN9780521798365.
- ^Pearce J.A.; Stern R.J. (2006). Christie D.M.; Fisher C.R.; Lee S.-M.; Givens S. (eds.). Origin of Back-Arc Basin Magmas: Trace Element and Isotope Perspectives. Back-Arc Spreading Systems: Geological, Biological, Chemical, and Physical Interactions. Wiley. doi:10.1029/166GM06. ISBN9780875904313.
- ^Wright T.J.; Ayele A.; Ferguson D.; Kidane T.; Vye-Brown C., eds. (2016). Magmatic rifting and active volcanism: introduction. Magmatic Rifting and Active Volcanism. Special Publications. 420. Geological Society, London. pp. 1–9. doi:10.1144/SP420.18. ISBN9781862397293. S2CID73658389.
- ^Ernst R.E. (2014). Large Igneous Provinces. Cambridge University Press. p. 3. ISBN9780521871778.