This volume follows a Specialized Symposium on "Mantle denudation in
slow spreading ridges and in ophiolites", held at the XII EUG Meeting in
Strasbourg, spring 1993. During the meeting it was felt that the
contribu- tions to the Symposium justified a volume presenting its main
scientific achievements. The present title of the volume shows that the
center of inter- est has slightly shifted with respect to the initial
objective: in order to under- stand the processes involved in accretion
taking place at oceanic ridges, it is crucial to study the interaction
between uppermost mantle and lower crust. The approach favored here is
that of petrological and structural analysis of oceanic rocks in
present-day oceanic ridges combined with similar studies in ophiolites.
Rock specimen collected by submersibles or dredge hauls in oceanic ridge
environments provide a "ground truth". However, except for areas such as
the MARK (Mid-Atlantic Ridge ne ar Kane fracture zone) where, thanks to
multiple submersible dives, the local geology is known with aprecision
even better than in many onshore ophiolites, mutual rela- tionships
between uppermost mantle and lower crust are poorly known. In contrast,
onshore ophiolites provide a necessary large-scale picture built up over
many years of structural and petrological mapping.