Magma Chamber Process of Post–collisional Magmatism: Insight from Textural and Elemental Characteristics of Plagioclase from the Tatun Volcanic Group, Northern Taiwan Volcanic Zone

Author(s):  
Xia ZHANG ◽  
Kun GUO ◽  
Shulong JIANG ◽  
Jianwen SUN ◽  
Bingtian JIANG ◽  
...  
2002 ◽  
Vol 182 (2-4) ◽  
pp. 513-528 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kuo-Lung Wang ◽  
Sun-Lin Chung ◽  
Chang-Hwa Chen ◽  
Cheng-Hong Chen

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Páll Einarsson ◽  
Bryndís Brandsdóttir

A half century of monitoring of the Northern Volcanic Zone of Iceland, a branch of the North America—Eurasia plate boundary, shows that the seismicity is very unevenly distributed, both in time and space. The four central volcanoes at the boundary, Þeistareykir, Krafla, Fremrinámar, and Askja, show persistent but very low-level seismicity, spatially coinciding with their high-temperature geothermal systems. On their rift structures, on the other hand, seismicity is almost absent, except during rifting episodes. Krafla went through a rifting episode in 1975–1984 with inflation, interrupted by 20 diking events with extensive rifting, eruptive activity, and intense seismicity along an 80 km long section of the rift. During inflation periods, the seismicity was contained within the caldera of the volcano, reflecting the inflation level of the magma chamber. Diking events were marked by seismicity propagating away from the volcano into the fissure swarms to the south or north of the volcano, accompanied by rapid deflation of the caldera magma chamber. These events lasted from 1 day to 3 months, and the dike length varied between 1 and 60 km. The area around the Askja volcano is the only section of the Northern Volcanic Zone that shows persistent moderate seismicity. The largest events are located between fissure swarms of adjacent volcanic systems. Detailed relative locations of hypocenters reveal a system of vertical strike-slip faults, forming a conjugate system consistent with minimum principal stress in the direction of spreading across the plate boundary. A diking event into the lower crust was identified in the adjacent fissure swarm at Upptyppingar in 2007–2008. Four nests of anomalously deep earthquakes (10–34 km) have been identified in the Askja region, apparently associated with the movements of magma well below the brittle-ductile transition. Several processes have been pointed out as possible causes of earthquakes in the deformation zone around the plate boundary. These include inflation and deflation of central volcanoes, intrusion of propagating dikes, both laterally and vertically, strike-slip faulting on conjugate fault systems between overlapping fissure swarms, migration of magma in the lower, ductile crust, and geothermal heat mining.


Diversity ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (8) ◽  
pp. 395
Author(s):  
Liang-Chi Wang

Paleoecological data can be used to inform nature conservation practice. Dream Lake (DL) is the best-preserved peat bog in the Tatun Volcanic Group of northern Taiwan. We analyzed continuous pollen and charcoal data from a well-dated sediment core from DL to reconstruct the changes in climate, lacustrine condition, and floristic diversity during the last 4500 cal BP. An absence of volcanic ash from all sediments indicates weak volcanic activity. Significant changes in lithology and pollen composition show that DL changed from a deep lake to a shallow peat bog from 3000 cal BP onwards. The palynological diversity index was negatively correlated with fire frequency. A substantial decline in Isoetes (quillwort) spores suggests increased vulnerability during the peat bog period. Natural terrestrialization will lower the mean water depth of DL below the minimum required for Isoetes taiwanensis survival within 300 years. Our findings indicate that winter precipitation driven by intense East Asian winter monsoons is the critical force determining the long-term variation in floristic diversity and abundance of I. taiwanensis. This long-term ecological history of DL, derived using paleoecological techniques, will be used to inform conservation practice in the Tatun Volcanic Group.


2005 ◽  
Vol 32 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mauricio Mella ◽  
Jorge Muñoz ◽  
Mario Vergara ◽  
Erik Klohn ◽  
Lang Farmer ◽  
...  

1991 ◽  
Vol 128 (5) ◽  
pp. 505-516 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Beddoe-Stephens ◽  
I. Mason

AbstractA number of garnetiferous minor intrusions have been mapped within the Borrowdale Volcanic Group. They underlie garnetiferous extrusive volcanic rocks which occur toward the top of a sequence of ignimbrite and lava – the Airy's Bridge Formation – which is the product of a major caldera-forming eruptive episode. Garnet and whole-rock geochemistry indicate that most of the intrusions are indistinguishable from garnetiferous dacite forming the final eruptive unit of the Airy's Bridge Formation: a co-magmatic link is therefore postulated. One of the intrusions, which intrudes the Airy's Bridge Formation, is distinct and may be related to the later Eskdale pluton.It is suggested that following the emplacement of ignimbrites forming the basal half of the Airy's Bridge Formation, caldera collapse partially sealed a fissure-conduit system and degassed, garnet-bearing magma was intruded as dykes and sills and locally extruded as a post-explosive lava dome. It is also postulated that garnet crystallized in a high-level magma chamber (P < 3 kb) and that reverse chemical zoning was due to growth while sinking through compositionally stratified magma.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yu-Lien Yeh ◽  
Wei-Hau Wang ◽  
Strong Wen

AbstractSeveral recent studies suggest that the Tatun Volcano Group (TVG) in the Taipei metropolis of Taiwan is still active with a mappable magma chamber beneath it. Here we report new seismic evidence from dense seismic arrays in northern Taiwan to refute the presence of a massive magma chamber. We investigated two near Taipei earthquakes with focal depths of ~ 140 km. We found that all the waveforms exhibited distinct S waves even when they traversed across the previously postulated magma chamber. Instead, the S-wave shadows found in the previous study may result from seismic waves traveling through a magma diapir above the subducting Philippine Sea Plate offshore northern Taiwan. Moreover, we found the P-wave delay increased with hypocentral distance when the seismic waves propagated through the footwall (west side) of the Shanchiao fault, regardless of whether they traversed across the postulated magma chamber. Our study results also indicate no abnormal attenuation when seismic rays traversed across the postulated magma chamber. Furthermore, the average $${Q}_{P}/{Q}_{S}$$ Q P / Q S ratio around the TVG is less than 1, which implies that scattering attenuation is dominant. We conclude that a highly fractured rock body is beneath the TVG with a tiny fraction of magma instead of a massive magma chamber. Without sufficient magma supply, the TVG may stay dormant (except for small phreatic eruptions).


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