Magma Evolution in the Primitive, Intra-oceanic Tonga Arc: Petrogenesis of Basaltic Andesites at Tofua Volcano


Autoria(s): Caulfield, J. T.; Turner, S. P.; Smith, I. E. M.; Cooper, L. B.; Jenner, G. A.
Data(s)

01/06/2012

Resumo

<p>Tofua volcano is situated midway along the Tonga oceanic arc and has undergone two phases of ignimbrite-forming activity. The eruptive products are almost entirely basaltic andesites (52 center dot 5-57 wt % SiO2) with the exception of a volumetrically minor pre-caldera dacite. The suite displays a strong tholeiitic trend with K2O <1 wt %. Phenocryst assemblages typically comprise plagioclase + clinopyroxene +/- orthopyroxene with microlites of Ti-magnetite. Olivine (Fo(83-88)) is rare and believed to be dominantly antecrystic. An increase in the extent and frequency of reverse zoning in phenocrysts, sieve-textured plagioclase and the occurrence of antecrystic phases in post-caldera lavas record a shift to dynamic conditions, allowing the interaction of magma batches that were previously distinct. Pyroxene thermobarometry suggests crystallization at 950-1200 degrees C and 0 center dot 8-1 center dot 8 kbar. Volatile measurements of glassy melt inclusions indicate a maximum H2O content of 4 center dot 16 wt % H2O, and CO2-H2O saturation curves indicate that crystallization occurred at two levels, at depths of 4-5 center dot 5 km and 1 center dot 5-2 center dot 5 km. Major and trace element models suggest that the compositions of the majority of the samples represent a differentiation trend whereby the dacite was produced by 65% fractional crystallization of the most primitive basaltic andesite. Trace element models suggest that the sub-arc mantle source is the residuum of depleted Indian mid-ocean ridge basalt mantle (IDMM-1% melt), whereas radiogenic isotope data imply addition of 0 center dot 2% average Tongan sediment melt and a fluid component derived from the subducted altered Pacific oceanic crust. A horizontal array on the U-Th equiline diagram and Ra excesses of up to 500% suggest fluid addition to the mantle wedge within the last few thousand years. Time-integrated (Ra-226/Th-230) vs Sr/Th and Ba/Th fractionation models imply differentiation timescales of up to 4500 years for the dacitic magma compositions at Tofua.</p>

Identificador

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/magma-evolution-in-the-primitive-intraoceanic-tonga-arc-petrogenesis-of-basaltic-andesites-at-tofua-volcano(e5a8f272-36ba-4f5d-b67c-62cc04fbccea).html

http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/petrology/egs013

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess

Fonte

Caulfield , J T , Turner , S P , Smith , I E M , Cooper , L B & Jenner , G A 2012 , ' Magma Evolution in the Primitive, Intra-oceanic Tonga Arc: Petrogenesis of Basaltic Andesites at Tofua Volcano ' Journal of petrology , vol 53 , no. 6 , pp. 1197-1230 . DOI: 10.1093/petrology/egs013

Palavras-Chave #Tonga arc #basaltic andesites #antecryst #fractionation #fluid addition #timescales #KERMADEC ISLAND-ARC #U-SERIES DISEQUILIBRIA #NATURAL SILICATE LIQUIDS #MOUNT-ST-HELENS #TRACE-ELEMENTS #SUBDUCTION ZONES #NEW-ZEALAND #SW PACIFIC #LESSER ANTILLES #PARTITION-COEFFICIENTS
Tipo

article