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RESEARCH PRODUCT
First volatile inventory for Gorely volcano, Kamchatka
Andrew J. S. McgonigleYuri A. TaranGaetano GiudiceSergio CalabreseI. ChaplyginGiancarlo TamburelloP. AllardAlessandro AiuppaAlessandro AiuppaMarco Liuzzosubject
geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEarth scienceGeochemistryGas releaseVolcanismMantle (geology)PlumeGeophysicsFlux (metallurgy)VolcanoMagmatismGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesGeologydescription
[1] We report here the very first assessment of volatile flux emissions from Gorely, an actively degassing volcano in Kamchatka. Using a variety of in situ and remote sensing techniques, we determined the bulk plume concentrations of major volatiles (H2O ∼93.5%, CO2, ∼2.6%, SO2 ∼2.2%, HCl 1.1%, HF 0.3%, H20.2%) and trace-halogens (Br, I), therefore estimating a total gas release of ∼11,000 tons·day−1during September 2011, at which time the target was non-eruptively degassing at ∼900°C. Gorely is a typical arc emitter, contributing 0.3% and 1.6% of the total global fluxes from arc volcanism for CO2 and HCl, respectively. We show that Gorely's volcanic gas (H2O/SO2 ∼43, CO2/SO2 ∼1.2, HCl/SO2∼0.5) is a representative mean end-member for arc magmatism in the north-west Pacific region. On this basis we derive new constraints for the abundances and origins of volatiles in the subduction-modified mantle source which feeds magmatism in Kamchatka.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2012-03-28 | Geophysical Research Letters |