532 resultados para 135-836
Resumo:
Concentrations of dark-colored, highly vesicular, quench-textured mesostasis occur commonly in volcanic rocks drilled in the Lau Basin during Leg 135. These segregations occur as veins, patches, and vesicle linings in rocks with 49%-54% SiO2. The segregations are depleted in Mg, Ca, Al, Sc, Ni, and Cr and enriched in Ti, Ba, Y, and Zr compared to the groundmass with which they occur. Many of the segregations are unusually enriched in copper. The elemental variations show that the segregations are residual liquids produced by 12%-55% crystallization of plagioclase and clinopyroxene, with minor olivine, opaques, or orthopyroxene from the groundmass melt. The liquids forming the segregations are mobilized and emplaced in earlier formed vesicles during the rapid crystallization of the groundmass. The dominant process in this mobilization and emplacement is volatile exsolution from crystallizing melts constrained by a rigid crystalline framework. This exsolution produces significant overpressures within the late-stage melts; the overpressure drives the residual melts through the walls of the older vesicles, along planes of weakness, and into voids. This mechanism is consistent with the occurrence of bimodal vesicle populations in many of the host lavas.
Resumo:
Several samples from the rhyolitic lavas encountered in Hole 841 B in the Tonga Forearc were made available by A. Ewart for potassiumargon (K-Ar) dating in an attempt to constrain the age of the eruptions. The material was supplied in crushed form and consisted primarily of volcanic glass together with some microphenocrysts made up mainly of plagioclase and quartz. Plagioclase could not be separated in sufficient amount for dating, especially as the potassium content of the plagioclase was quite low (~0.055% K). Petrographic examination of the volcanic glass indicated that it was remarkably fresh: it was clear, unaltered, and essentially isotopic. Thus, it was decided to attempt to date the volcanic glass.