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RESEARCH PRODUCT

The Permeability Evolution of Tuffisites and Implications for Outgassing Through Dense Rhyolitic Magma

Thierry ReuschléMichael J. HeapFabian B. WadsworthHugh TuffenJonathan M. CastroC. Ian Schipper

subject

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesLava[SDU.STU.GP]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Geophysics [physics.geo-ph]SilicicLava domePyroclastic rock01 natural sciencesOutgassingGeophysics13. Climate actionSpace and Planetary ScienceGeochemistry and PetrologyRhyoliteMagmaEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)Fracture (geology)PetrologyGeologyComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS0105 earth and related environmental sciences

description

There is growing evidence that outgassing through transient fracture networks exerts an important control on conduit processes and explosive‐effusive activity during silicic eruptions. Indeed, the first modern observations of rhyolitic eruptions have revealed that degassed lava effusion may depend upon outgassing during simultaneous pyroclastic venting. The outgassing is thought to occur as gas and pyroclastic debris are discharged through shallow fracture networks within otherwise low‐permeability, conduit‐plugging lava domes. However, this discharge is only transient, as these fractures become clogged and eventually blocked by the accumulation and sintering of hot, melt‐rich pyroclastic debris, drastically reducing their permeability and creating particle‐filled tuffisites. In this study we present the first published permeability measurements for rhyolitic tuffisites, using samples from the recent rhyolitic eruptions at Chaiten (2008‐2009) and Cordon Caulle (2011‐2012) in Chile. To place constraints on tuffisite permeability evolution, we combine (1) laboratory measurements of the porosity and permeability of tuffisites that preserve different degrees of sintering, (2) theoretical estimates on grainsize‐ and temperature‐dependent sintering timescales, and (3) H2O diffusion constraints on pressure‐time paths. The inferred timescales of sintering‐driven tuffisite compaction and permeability loss, spanning seconds (in the case of compaction‐driven sintering) to hours (surface tension‐driven sintering), coincide with timescales of diffusive degassing into tuffisites, observed vent pulsations during hybrid rhyolitic activity (extrusive behaviour coincident with intermittent explosions) and, more broadly, timescales of pressurisation accompanying silicic lava dome extrusion. We discuss herein the complex feedbacks between fracture opening, closing, and sintering, and their role in outgassing rhyolite lavas and mediating hybrid explosive‐effusive activity.

10.1029/2018jb017035https://doi.org/10.1029/2018JB017035