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2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (23) ◽  
pp. 4780
Author(s):  
Willeke A’Campo ◽  
Annett Bartsch ◽  
Achim Roth ◽  
Anna Wendleder ◽  
Victoria S. Martin ◽  
...  

Arctic tundra landscapes are highly complex and are rapidly changing due to the warming climate. Datasets that document the spatial and temporal variability of the landscape are needed to monitor the rapid changes. Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) imagery is specifically suitable for monitoring the Arctic, as SAR, unlike optical remote sensing, can provide time series regardless of weather and illumination conditions. This study examines the potential of seasonal backscatter mechanisms in Arctic tundra environments for improving land cover classification purposes by using a time series of HH/HV TerraSAR-X (TSX) imagery. A Random Forest (RF) classification was applied on multi-temporal Sigma Nought intensity and multi-temporal Kennaugh matrix element data. The backscatter analysis revealed clear differences in the polarimetric response of water, soil, and vegetation, while backscatter signal variations within different vegetation classes were more nuanced. The RF models showed that land cover classes could be distinguished with 92.4% accuracy for the Kennaugh element data, compared to 57.7% accuracy for the Sigma Nought intensity data. Texture predictors, while improving the classification accuracy on the one hand, degraded the spatial resolution of the land cover product. The Kennaugh elements derived from TSX winter acquisitions were most important for the RF model, followed by the Kennaugh elements derived from summer and autumn acquisitions. The results of this study demonstrate that multi-temporal Kennaugh elements derived from dual-polarized X-band imagery are a powerful tool for Arctic tundra land cover mapping.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Sarah Alicia Martin

<p>Andesitic magmas are the product of a complex interplay of processes including fractional crystallisation, crystal accumulation, magma mixing and crustal assimilation. Recent studies have suggested that andesitic rocks are in many cases a complex mixture of a crystal cargo and melts with more silicic compositions than andesite. In situ glass- and mineral-specific geochemical techniques are therefore key to unravelling the processes and timescales over which andesitic magmas are produced, assembled and transported to the surface. To this end, this thesis presents a detailed in situ glass- and mineral-specific study of six Holocene eruptions (Kaupokonui, Maketawa, Inglewood a and b, and Korito) at Mt Taranaki to investigate the petrogenetic processes responsible for producing these sub-plinian eruptions at this long-lived (130 000 yr) andesitic volcano. Mt Taranaki is an andesitic stratovolcano located on the west coast of New Zealand’s North Island and as such it is distinct from the main subduction related volcanism. Crystal-specific major and trace element data were combined with textural analysis and quantitative modelling of intensive magmatic parameters and crystal residence times to identify distinct mineral populations and constrain the magmatic histories of the crystal populations. Least-squares mixing modelling of glass and phenocryst compositions demonstrates that the andesitic compositions of bulk rock Mt Taranaki eruptives results from mixing of a daciticrhyolitic melt and a complex crystal cargo (plagioclase, pyroxene, amphibole) that crystallised from multiple melts under a wide range of crustal conditions. Magma mixing of compositionally similar end members that mix efficiently also occurred beneath Mt Taranaki, and as such only produced prominent disequilibrium textures in a small proportion of the minerals in the crystal cargo. The chemistry of the earliest crystallising amphibole indicates crystallisation from an andesitic-dacitic melt at depths of ca. 20-25 km, within the lower crust. Magmas then ascended through the crust relatively slowly via a complex magmatic plumbing system. However, most of the crystal cargo formed by decompression-driven crystallisation at depth so 6-10 km, as is indicated by the dominance of oscillatory zoning and the equilibrium obtained between mineral rims and the host glasses. Taranaki magmas recharge on timescales of 1000-2000 yrs. The eruptions investigated here provide a snapshot of the end of one cycle and the beginning of another. The younger Kaupokonui and Maketawa eruptions (ca. 2890 - <1950 yr BP) are the least evolved magmas, record a stronger mixing signal in the crystal cargo, and are volumetrically smaller than the earlier Inglewood a and b and Korito eruptions (ca. 4150-3580 yr BP). The Kaupokonui and Maketawa eruptions may reflect arrival of a new pulse of magma from the lower crust, or that these are early eruptions within a recharge sequence, which have not had as much time to further differentiate and evolve as the earlier Inglewood a and b and Korito eruptions that represent the end of a magma recharge cycle. One of the six investigated eruptions was identified to come from Fantham’s Peak on the basis of its distinctive glass and mineral chemistry and petrology. Glass trace element data indicate that this eurption’s magmatic system was distinct from that of the other main vent Holocene eruptions investigated in this study. Crystal residence times were investigated using Fe-Mg interdiffusion in clinopyroxene and indicate that magma bodies stall in upper crustal storage chambers for timescales of a few months to years. The younger eruptions of the least evolved magmas with the strongest mixing signal return the shortest residence times, which may indicate that magma mixing events occurring a few months before eruption may have been the trigger for these eruptions at Mt Taranaki. Amphibole geospeedometry for these eruptives reveal rapid magma transport from depths of 6-10 km to the surface on timescales of < 1 week.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Sarah Alicia Martin

<p>Andesitic magmas are the product of a complex interplay of processes including fractional crystallisation, crystal accumulation, magma mixing and crustal assimilation. Recent studies have suggested that andesitic rocks are in many cases a complex mixture of a crystal cargo and melts with more silicic compositions than andesite. In situ glass- and mineral-specific geochemical techniques are therefore key to unravelling the processes and timescales over which andesitic magmas are produced, assembled and transported to the surface. To this end, this thesis presents a detailed in situ glass- and mineral-specific study of six Holocene eruptions (Kaupokonui, Maketawa, Inglewood a and b, and Korito) at Mt Taranaki to investigate the petrogenetic processes responsible for producing these sub-plinian eruptions at this long-lived (130 000 yr) andesitic volcano. Mt Taranaki is an andesitic stratovolcano located on the west coast of New Zealand’s North Island and as such it is distinct from the main subduction related volcanism. Crystal-specific major and trace element data were combined with textural analysis and quantitative modelling of intensive magmatic parameters and crystal residence times to identify distinct mineral populations and constrain the magmatic histories of the crystal populations. Least-squares mixing modelling of glass and phenocryst compositions demonstrates that the andesitic compositions of bulk rock Mt Taranaki eruptives results from mixing of a daciticrhyolitic melt and a complex crystal cargo (plagioclase, pyroxene, amphibole) that crystallised from multiple melts under a wide range of crustal conditions. Magma mixing of compositionally similar end members that mix efficiently also occurred beneath Mt Taranaki, and as such only produced prominent disequilibrium textures in a small proportion of the minerals in the crystal cargo. The chemistry of the earliest crystallising amphibole indicates crystallisation from an andesitic-dacitic melt at depths of ca. 20-25 km, within the lower crust. Magmas then ascended through the crust relatively slowly via a complex magmatic plumbing system. However, most of the crystal cargo formed by decompression-driven crystallisation at depth so 6-10 km, as is indicated by the dominance of oscillatory zoning and the equilibrium obtained between mineral rims and the host glasses. Taranaki magmas recharge on timescales of 1000-2000 yrs. The eruptions investigated here provide a snapshot of the end of one cycle and the beginning of another. The younger Kaupokonui and Maketawa eruptions (ca. 2890 - <1950 yr BP) are the least evolved magmas, record a stronger mixing signal in the crystal cargo, and are volumetrically smaller than the earlier Inglewood a and b and Korito eruptions (ca. 4150-3580 yr BP). The Kaupokonui and Maketawa eruptions may reflect arrival of a new pulse of magma from the lower crust, or that these are early eruptions within a recharge sequence, which have not had as much time to further differentiate and evolve as the earlier Inglewood a and b and Korito eruptions that represent the end of a magma recharge cycle. One of the six investigated eruptions was identified to come from Fantham’s Peak on the basis of its distinctive glass and mineral chemistry and petrology. Glass trace element data indicate that this eurption’s magmatic system was distinct from that of the other main vent Holocene eruptions investigated in this study. Crystal residence times were investigated using Fe-Mg interdiffusion in clinopyroxene and indicate that magma bodies stall in upper crustal storage chambers for timescales of a few months to years. The younger eruptions of the least evolved magmas with the strongest mixing signal return the shortest residence times, which may indicate that magma mixing events occurring a few months before eruption may have been the trigger for these eruptions at Mt Taranaki. Amphibole geospeedometry for these eruptives reveal rapid magma transport from depths of 6-10 km to the surface on timescales of < 1 week.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Chelsea May Tutt

<p>Mount Tauhara is the largest dacitic volcanic complex of onshore New Zealand and comprises seven subaerial domes and associated lava and pyroclastic flows, with a total exposed volume of ca. 1 km3. The dacites have a complex petrography including quartz, plagioclase, amphibole, orthopyroxene, clinopyroxene, olivine and Fe‐Ti oxides and offer an excellent opportunity to investigate the processes and timescales involved in assembling dacitic magma bodies in a continental subduction zone with in situ and mineral specific analytical techniques. Whole rock major and trace element data and Pb isotopes ratios define linear relationships indicating that the dacites are generated by mixing of silicic and mafic magmas. Two groups of samples define separate mixing trends between four endmembers on the basis of La/Yb ratios, 87Sr/86Sr ratios and Sr contents. The older Western and Central Domes have low 87Sr/86Sr (0.7042‐0.7046) and high LREE/HREE (LaN/YbN = 8.0‐11.5) and Sr (380‐650 ppm) compared to the younger Hipaua, Trig M, Breached and Main Domes, which have higher 87Sr/86Sr (0.7047‐0.7052) and lower LREE/HREE (LaN/YbN = 6.5‐7.5) and Sr (180‐400 ppm). In situ mineral major and trace element chemistry of mineral phases, as well as Sr and Pb isotope ratios of mineral separates have been used to: (i) fingerprint the origin of each crystal phase; (ii) constrain the chemistry of the four endmembers involved in the mixing events and; (iii) estimate the timing of mixing relative to eruption and the ascent rate of the dacitic magmas. The presence of quartz and analyses of quartz‐hosted melt inclusions are used to fingerprint the chemistry of the silicic endmembers, which is a rhyolitic melt with a major element chemistry similar to that of either the Whakamaru Group Ignimbrite melts (Western, Central and Trig M Domes) or intermediate between that of the Whakamaru and the Oruanui Ignimbrite melts (Hipaua, Breached and Main Domes). Similarly, Ba‐Sr concentrations and Sr isotopic signatures of plagioclase show that this phenocryst phase also predominantly crystallized from the rhyolitic melt. Variations in the Mg# and trace element chemistry of clinopyroxenes suggest they were formed both in the mixed dacitic melts and in a mafic endmember. The chemistry of the mafic endmembers have been traced using a combination of back‐calculated Sr melt concentrations from clinopyroxene with the highest Mg# in each sample group, and the linear trends between whole rock SiO2 content and most elements. These results indicate that dacites erupted from the Western and Central Dome were generated by the mixing of a high alumina basalt and a rhyolitic melt and Trig M Dome dacites were generated by the mixing of an andesite with a rhyolitic melt. Magmas erupted from Hipaua, Breached and Main Domes were also produced by the mixing of an andesitic melt and a rhyolitic body with a composition intermediate between that of the Whakamaru and the Oruanui melt bodies. Trace element data and 87Sr/86Sr ratios of amphibole demonstrate that it crystallized from the mixed dacitic melt. Thermobarometric conditions obtained from amphibole indicate that the magma mixing event that produced the dacites occurred within a magma chamber located at ca. 9 km depth and ca. 900°C with the exception of Trig M Dome which occurred deeper at 13 km and 950°C. Diffusion profiles of Ti in quartz and Fe‐Mg in clinopyroxene indicate the magma mixing events occurred < 6 months prior to eruption. Amphibole reaction rims show the magma to have ascended over 2‐3 weeks for each dome, with the exception of Main Dome where reaction rims were not present in the amphibole, suggesting the ascent rate was faster than 0.2 m/s (< 6 hours).</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Chelsea May Tutt

<p>Mount Tauhara is the largest dacitic volcanic complex of onshore New Zealand and comprises seven subaerial domes and associated lava and pyroclastic flows, with a total exposed volume of ca. 1 km3. The dacites have a complex petrography including quartz, plagioclase, amphibole, orthopyroxene, clinopyroxene, olivine and Fe‐Ti oxides and offer an excellent opportunity to investigate the processes and timescales involved in assembling dacitic magma bodies in a continental subduction zone with in situ and mineral specific analytical techniques. Whole rock major and trace element data and Pb isotopes ratios define linear relationships indicating that the dacites are generated by mixing of silicic and mafic magmas. Two groups of samples define separate mixing trends between four endmembers on the basis of La/Yb ratios, 87Sr/86Sr ratios and Sr contents. The older Western and Central Domes have low 87Sr/86Sr (0.7042‐0.7046) and high LREE/HREE (LaN/YbN = 8.0‐11.5) and Sr (380‐650 ppm) compared to the younger Hipaua, Trig M, Breached and Main Domes, which have higher 87Sr/86Sr (0.7047‐0.7052) and lower LREE/HREE (LaN/YbN = 6.5‐7.5) and Sr (180‐400 ppm). In situ mineral major and trace element chemistry of mineral phases, as well as Sr and Pb isotope ratios of mineral separates have been used to: (i) fingerprint the origin of each crystal phase; (ii) constrain the chemistry of the four endmembers involved in the mixing events and; (iii) estimate the timing of mixing relative to eruption and the ascent rate of the dacitic magmas. The presence of quartz and analyses of quartz‐hosted melt inclusions are used to fingerprint the chemistry of the silicic endmembers, which is a rhyolitic melt with a major element chemistry similar to that of either the Whakamaru Group Ignimbrite melts (Western, Central and Trig M Domes) or intermediate between that of the Whakamaru and the Oruanui Ignimbrite melts (Hipaua, Breached and Main Domes). Similarly, Ba‐Sr concentrations and Sr isotopic signatures of plagioclase show that this phenocryst phase also predominantly crystallized from the rhyolitic melt. Variations in the Mg# and trace element chemistry of clinopyroxenes suggest they were formed both in the mixed dacitic melts and in a mafic endmember. The chemistry of the mafic endmembers have been traced using a combination of back‐calculated Sr melt concentrations from clinopyroxene with the highest Mg# in each sample group, and the linear trends between whole rock SiO2 content and most elements. These results indicate that dacites erupted from the Western and Central Dome were generated by the mixing of a high alumina basalt and a rhyolitic melt and Trig M Dome dacites were generated by the mixing of an andesite with a rhyolitic melt. Magmas erupted from Hipaua, Breached and Main Domes were also produced by the mixing of an andesitic melt and a rhyolitic body with a composition intermediate between that of the Whakamaru and the Oruanui melt bodies. Trace element data and 87Sr/86Sr ratios of amphibole demonstrate that it crystallized from the mixed dacitic melt. Thermobarometric conditions obtained from amphibole indicate that the magma mixing event that produced the dacites occurred within a magma chamber located at ca. 9 km depth and ca. 900°C with the exception of Trig M Dome which occurred deeper at 13 km and 950°C. Diffusion profiles of Ti in quartz and Fe‐Mg in clinopyroxene indicate the magma mixing events occurred < 6 months prior to eruption. Amphibole reaction rims show the magma to have ascended over 2‐3 weeks for each dome, with the exception of Main Dome where reaction rims were not present in the amphibole, suggesting the ascent rate was faster than 0.2 m/s (< 6 hours).</p>


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francis Ö. Dudás ◽  
Hua Zhang ◽  
Shu-Zhong Shen ◽  
Samuel A. Bowring

We report extensive major and trace element data for the Permian-Triassic boundary (PTB) at Meishan, China. Analyses of 64 samples from a 2.5 m section span the last 75 kyr of the Permian and the first 335 kyr of the Triassic, from beds 24 to 34. We also report data for 20 acetic acid extracts that characterize the carbonate fraction. Whole rock major element data reflect the change of lithology from carbonate in the Permian to mudstone and marl in the Triassic, indicate an increase of siliciclastic input and MgO in and above the extinction interval (beds 24f–28), and silica diagenesis in carbonates below the extinction horizon. Above bed 27, enrichment factors calculated with respect to Al and Post-Archean Australian Shale (PAAS) are ∼1 for most trace elements, confirming that siliciclastic input dominates trace element distributions in the Triassic. Within the extinction interval, beds 24f and 26 show increases in As, Mo, U and some transition metals. V, Cr, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, Pb, and Ba are variably enriched, particularly in bed 26. Below the extinction interval, the top of bed 24d shows enrichment of V, Cr, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, Pb, and Ba in a zone of diagenetic silicification. Trace elements thus reflect siliciclastic input, diagenetic redistribution, and responses to redox conditions. Trace element patterns suggest either a change in provenance of the detrital component, or a change in the proportion of mechanical to chemical weathering that is coincident with the beginning of the extinction in bed 24f. Ba, Zr, and Zn behave anomalously. Ba shows little variation, despite changes in biological activity and redox conditions. The enrichment factor for Zr is variable in the carbonates below bed 24f, suggesting diagenetic Zr mobility. Zn shows a sharp drop in the extinction horizon, suggesting that its distribution was related to phytoplankton productivity. Rare earth element content is controlled by the siliciclastic fraction, and carbonate extracts show middle rare earth enrichment due to diagenesis. Ce and Eu anomalies are not reliable indicators of the redox environment at Meishan.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yanfei Xia ◽  
Changqing Yin ◽  
et al.

Supplemental tables contain the whole-rock and mineral compositions, PT estimates, zircon SIMS Th-U-Pb isotopic data and trace element data.


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