A model of reverse differentiation at Dikii Greben' Volcano, Kamchatka: progressive basic magma vesiculation in a silicic magma chamber

1994 ◽  
Vol 117 (3) ◽  
pp. 263-278 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. N. Bindeman ◽  
J. C. Bailey
1969 ◽  
Vol 106 (6) ◽  
pp. 531-541 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. H. Blake

SUMMARYThe ‘Maelifell caldera’ is the name given to a separate collapse area situated on the southern margin of the main caldera of the Tertiary Alftafjordur volcano. It is 2 km in diameter and is made up of inward dipping welded tuffs, agglomerate (including patches of welded agglomerate), tuffaceous sediments and rhyolite and andesite lavas. The welded tuffs occur as thin pitchstone sheets and as much thicker felsitic masses: the former contain inclusions of basalt glass and are good examples of the simultaneous eruption of acid and basic magmas. It is suggested that the caldera represents the core of a parasitic volcano, beneath which there was a high level acid magma chamber, the immediate source of the local acid rocks. The magma chamber was intersected by numerous intrusions of basic magma, and these caused explosive eruptions and the emission of acid and basic magma to form thin pitchstone sheets. Decreased pressure in the magma chamber after eruptions caused repeated collapse within the cal


2010 ◽  
Vol 51 (6) ◽  
pp. 1333-1354 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Tomiya ◽  
E. Takahashi ◽  
N. Furukawa ◽  
T. Suzuki

Author(s):  
Takehiro Koyaguchi ◽  
Katsuya Kaneko

In order to understand the governing factors of petrological features of erupted magmas of island-arc or continental volcanoes, thermal fluctuations of subvolcanic silicic magma chambers caused by intermittent basalt replenishments are investigated from the theoretical viewpoint. When basaltic magmas are repeatedly emplaced into continental crust, a long-lived silicic magma chamber may form. A silicic magma chamber within surrounding crust is composed of crystal-melt mixtures with variable melt fractions. We define the region which behaves as a liquid in a mechanical sense (‘liquid part’) and the region which is in the critical state between liquid and solid states (‘mush’) collectively as a magma chamber in this study. Such a magma chamber is surrounded by partially molten solid with lower melt fractions. Erupted magmas are considered to be derived from the liquid part. The size of a silicic magma chamber is determined by the long-term balance between heat supply from basalt and heat loss by conduction, while the temperature and the volume of the liquid part fluctuate in response to individual basalt inputs. Thermal evolution of a silicic magma chamber after each basalt input is divided into two stages. In the first stage, the liquid part rapidly propagates within the magma chamber by melting the silicic mush, and its temperature rises above and decays back to the effective fusion temperature of the crystal-melt mixture on a short timescale. In some cases the liquid part no longer exists. In the second stage, the liquid part ceases to propagate and cools slowly by heat conduction on a much longer timescale. The petrological features of the liquid part, such as the amount of unmelted preexisting crystals, depend on the intensity of individual pulses of the basalt heat source and the degree of fractionation during the first stage, as well as the bulk composition of the silicic magma.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
K. I. Konstantinou

Abstract Kolumbo submarine volcano lies 7 km NE of Santorini caldera and its last eruption which occurred in 1650 AD, caused damage and casualties to the nearby islands. Here a simple model of a chamber, containing silicic magma underlain by a smaller quantity of mafic magma, is utilised in order to understand the chamber behaviour during the 1650 AD eruption. Results show that in order to reproduce the duration (83–281 days) and the dense rock equivalent volume ($${\sim }\,2\, \hbox {km}^3$$ ∼ 2 km 3 ) of the eruption, initial overpressure in the chamber should be around 10 MPa and the mafic magma should occupy up to 5% of the chamber volume. It is found that the time needed to inject mafic magma equal to 1–15% of the chamber volume varies between 1.4–13.7 ka, if the radius of the chamber is about 1500 m as inferred from tomographic images. These long recurrence times agree well with the small number of eruptions ($$N = 5$$ N = 5 ) within a period of > 70 ka and suggest that an eruption in the near future is unlikely. Volcanic activity at Kolumbo is probably triggered by a combination of exsolved volatiles and a small but steady influx of mafic melt in the chamber.


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