Taylor Witcher , Steffi Burchardt , Tobias Mattsson , Michael J. Heap , William McCarthy
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Efficient outgassing of shallow magma bodies reduces the risk of explosive eruption. Silica-rich magmas are too viscous for exsolved gas bubbles to escape the system through buoyant forces alone, and so volatile overpressure is often released through deformation-related processes. Here we present a case study on magma emplacement-related deformation in a shallow (∼500 m depth) rhyolite intrusion (the Sandfell laccolith, Eastern Iceland) to investigate the establishment of degassing (volatile exsolution) and outgassing (gas escape) networks in silicic sub-volcanic intrusions. We observe viscous and brittle deformation features: from vesiculated flow bands that organized into ‘pore channels’ in the ductile regime, to uniform bands of tensile fractures (‘fracture bands’) that grade into breccia and gouge in the brittle regime. Through field mapping, structural analysis, and anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS) measurements, we show that areas with higher degrees of brittle deformation are proximal to abruptly changing AMS fabrics, and flow band orientations and point to laccolith-wide strain partitioning in the magma. We associate the changes in flow fabrics and the intensity of brittle deformation to the transition from dominantly horizontally flowing magma during initial sill-stacking to up to the NE magma flow linked to the propagation of a trap-door fault from the N to the SE. The establishment of intrusion-scale brittle permeable networks linked to changes in strain partitioning that facilitated magma flow during different stages of laccolith growth would have profoundly assisted the outgassing of the entire laccolith. Magmatic fracturing captures viscous and brittle processes working in tandem as an efficient outgassing mechanism, and should be considered in sub-volcanic intrusions elsewhere.
期刊介绍:
An international research journal with focus on volcanic and geothermal processes and their impact on the environment and society.
Submission of papers covering the following aspects of volcanology and geothermal research are encouraged:
(1) Geological aspects of volcanic systems: volcano stratigraphy, structure and tectonic influence; eruptive history; evolution of volcanic landforms; eruption style and progress; dispersal patterns of lava and ash; analysis of real-time eruption observations.
(2) Geochemical and petrological aspects of volcanic rocks: magma genesis and evolution; crystallization; volatile compositions, solubility, and degassing; volcanic petrography and textural analysis.
(3) Hydrology, geochemistry and measurement of volcanic and hydrothermal fluids: volcanic gas emissions; fumaroles and springs; crater lakes; hydrothermal mineralization.
(4) Geophysical aspects of volcanic systems: physical properties of volcanic rocks and magmas; heat flow studies; volcano seismology, geodesy and remote sensing.
(5) Computational modeling and experimental simulation of magmatic and hydrothermal processes: eruption dynamics; magma transport and storage; plume dynamics and ash dispersal; lava flow dynamics; hydrothermal fluid flow; thermodynamics of aqueous fluids and melts.
(6) Volcano hazard and risk research: hazard zonation methodology, development of forecasting tools; assessment techniques for vulnerability and impact.