Search results for "Magma"

showing 10 items of 262 documents

Petrography, mineralogy and geochemistry of a primitive pumice from Stromboli: implications for the deep feeding system

2011

We describe the field relations, petrographic, mineralogical and geochemical characteristics of an exceptional “ golden ” pumice belonging to a tephra layer exposed on the summit area of Stromboli volcano, Italy. Pumice sample PST-9 comes from a fallout deposit older than a spatter agglutinate sequence emplaced during the twentieth century. The eruption that produced it had a size exceeding that of intermediate paroxysms but was smaller than large-scale, spatter-forming, paroxysms from the sixteenth century and 1930 A.D. Lapilli are strongly vesicular and crystal-poor, similar to other “ golden ” pumices. Modal proportions include 89 vol% glass, 8 vol% clinopyroxene, 1–2 vol% olivine and 1–…

Basalteducation.field_of_studyOlivineGolden pumice010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesOlivine[SDE.MCG]Environmental Sciences/Global ChangesPopulationGeochemistryMineralogyengineering.material010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesLapilliPetrographyGeochemistry and PetrologyPumiceMagma[SDU.STU.VO]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/VolcanologyengineeringPlagioclaseStrombolieducationGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEuropean Journal of Mineralogy
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Unusually large magmatic CO2gas emissions prior to a basaltic paroxysm

2010

[1] The low-intensity activity of basaltic volcanoes is occasionally interrupted by short-lived but energetic explosions which, whilst frequently observed, are amongst the most enigmatic volcanic events in Nature. The combination of poorly understood and deep, challenging to measure, source processes make such events currently impossible to forecast. Here we report increases in quiescent degassing CO2 emissions (>10,000 t/day) prior to a powerful explosive event on Stromboli volcano on 15 March 2007. We interpret such large CO2 flux as being sourced by passive gas leakage from a deeply (>4 km) stored magma, whose depressurization, possibly caused by the onset of an effusive eruption on 28 F…

BasaltgeographyGeophysicsEffusive eruptiongeography.geographical_feature_categoryVolcanoMagmaCo2 fluxGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesPetrologySeismologyGeologyWest mediterraneanGeophysical Research Letters
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Petrology and geochemistry of submarine volcanism in the Sicily Channel Rift

2006

Submarine magmatism in the Sicily Channel Rift began in the early Pliocene and lasted until almost 200 yr ago. We present here petrological and geochemical data on volcanic rocks dredged from Graham and Nameless banks and Pantelleria seamounts in the Pelagian sector of the Sicily Channel Rift. Petrological evidence suggests that the ascent of magmas to the surface was relatively rapid, probably through channels superimposed over the major tectonic discontinuities of the Rift. Major and trace element data indicate an ocean island basalt affinity for Graham and Nameless bank alkaline lavas and a depleted tholeiitic signature for one Pantelleria seamount, which had a shallower mantle source. S…

BasaltgeographyRiftgeography.geographical_feature_categoryRadiogenic nuclideSiciy Channel PAntelelriaSeamountSettore GEO/07 - Petrologia E PetrografiaGeochemistryGeologyOcean island basaltsicily channel riftMantle (geology)sr‐nd‐pb isotopesVolcanic rockMagmatismsicily channel rift; sr‐nd‐pb isotopes; submarine volcanismPetrologysubmarine volcanismGeology
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First gas and thermal measurements at the frequently erupting Gamalama volcano (Indonesia) reveal a hydrothermally dominated magmatic system

2020

Abstract The first gas and thermal measurements at the summit of the Gamalama volcano indicate that the system is dominated by hydrothermal processes. This is highlighted by the prevalence of H2S over SO2 (H2S/SO2 = 2–8), a high CO2/SO2 ratio (76–201), and a low heat transfer (3.0 MW) to the surface. A relative variation in gas composition is observed along the degassing fracture zone, possibly due to partial S scrubbing. Despite this surface hydrothermal signature, the system exhibits high gas equilibrium temperatures (425–480 °C), indicating that fluids are not exclusively derived from a boiling hydrothermal aquifer, but also sourced by cooling and crystallizing basaltic magma at deep tha…

Basaltgeographygeography.geographical_feature_category010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesGeochemistryDominated hydrothermal systemFracture zoneGeodynamicsGamalama volcano010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesHydrothermal circulationPhreatic eruptionDominated hydrothermal system Gamalama volcano Pressure and tensile strengthGeophysicsVolcanoImpact craterPressure and tensile strength13. Climate actionGeochemistry and Petrology[SDU]Sciences of the Universe [physics]MagmaGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciences
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Chemo-probe into the mantle origin of the NW Anatolia Eocene to Miocene volcanic rocks: Implications for the role of, crustal accretion, subduction, …

2017

Post-collisional Cenozoic magmatic activity in NW Anatolia produced widespread volcanism across the region. In the Biga Peninsula, in the west, medium-K calc-alkaline to ultra-K rocks with orogenic geochemical signature were emplaced at similar to 43-15 Ma (Biga orogenic volcanic rocks; BOVR). Volcanic activity in the Central Sakarya region, to the east, is mainly restricted to-53-38 Ma, but also continued during the Early Miocene with small basaltic extrusives (Sakarya orogenic volcanic rocks; SOVR). This study presents a new set of geochemical data (whole rock major and trace elements and Sr-Nd-Pb isotopic compositions), obtained from the Cenozoic calc-alkaline volcanic rocks from these t…

Basaltgeographygeography.geographical_feature_category010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesbiologySubductionGeochemistryGeologyVolcanism010502 geochemistry & geophysicsbiology.organism_classification01 natural sciencesMantle (geology)Volcanic rockVolcano13. Climate actionGeochemistry and PetrologyMagmatismLileGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesLithos
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Amygdaloidal basalts: Isotopic and petrographic evidence for non-diagenetic crustal source of carbonate inclusions

1980

Even though carbonate amygdules in volcanics are generally assumed to be diagenetic in origin, the authors are of the opinion that almost all carbonate inclusions in the investigated amygdaloidal volcanic rocks from Sicily (Italy), Pindos (Greece) and Bohemia (Czechoslovakia), have a different origin. On the basis of a mineralogical, petrological and geochemical study these “amygdules” are interpreted as being remains ofmagmatic incorporation of carbonate. Therefore, the identification of carbonate globules in volcanics purely on field observations, is inadequate to distinguish true amygdules from carbonate assimilation remnants. A nomenclature of the various types of inclusions is proposed…

Basaltgeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryAmygduleAlkali basaltGeochemistryDiagenesisPetrographyVolcanic rockchemistry.chemical_compoundGeophysicschemistryGeochemistry and PetrologyMagmaCarbonatePetrologyGeologyTMPM Tschermaks Mineralogische und Petrographische Mitteilungen
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Crystal size distribution in Jurassic Ferrar flows and sills (Victoria Land, Antarctica): evidence for processes of cooling, nucleation, and crystall…

1996

Jurassic Ferrar rocks in Victoria Land (Antarctica) occur predominantly as basaltic or andesitic flows and sills. Both show characteristic petrographical and chemical variations, which can be related to in-situ differentiation processes. Such characteristics have been investigated at one flow (“Colonnade flow”) and one sill (“Thumb Point sill”) in the Prince Albert Mountains (Central Victoria Land) based on a statistical grain size analysis and the application of the crystal size distribution theory. A third magma body (“HiTi-unit”), which in previous literature was described as a flow, does not show clear similarities to either the flow or sill. Sill and flow are in-situ differentiated wit…

Basaltgeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryAndesiteAccumulation zoneNucleationSilicicengineering.materialGeophysicsSillGeochemistry and PetrologyMagmaengineeringPlagioclasePetrologyGeomorphologyGeologyContributions to Mineralogy and Petrology
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The Nevados de Payachata volcanic region (18�S/69�W, N. Chile) II. Evidence for widespread crustal involvement in Andean magmatism

1990

Volcanism extending over 11 Ma is represented in the rocks of the Nevados de Payachata region, culminating in the formation of two large composite stratocones within the last 500 000 years. Chemically distinct mafic magmas are erupted at a number of parasitic centers. These cannot be related to each other by crystal fractionation and do not appear to be direct parents for the differentiated suites of the composite cones. Two distinct trends are defined by the intermediate and evolved rocks; a high LILE (large ion lithophile element), TiO2 and Ce/Yb lineage among the youngest rocks (including the two major stratocones), and a more typical calc-alkaline trend among the older (>1 Ma) rock type…

Basaltgeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryFelsicMantle wedgeGeochemistryVolcanic rockGeophysicsBasaltic andesiteGeochemistry and PetrologyMagmaRhyoliteMaficGeologyContributions to Mineralogy and Petrology
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40Ar-39Ar ages and petrogenesis of middle Eocene post-collisional volcanic rocks along the Izmir-Ankara-Erzincan suture zone, NE Turkey

2019

Abstract The central and northeastern of Turkey were shaped by the transition from collisional to post-collisional tectonics and coeval magmatism during Early Cenozoic. However, the temporal and spatial evolution of the magmatism during the middle Eocene remains elusive. In this paper, we provide petrological, isotopic and radiometric data from two middle Eocene volcano-sedimentary successions, from the northern (Almus) and southern (Yildizeli) parts of the Izmir–Ankara–Erzincan Suture Zone, and discuss their generation in the post-collisional setting. Our results indicate that the volcanic units from these regions display similar stratigraphic and petrological evolution during the narrow w…

Basaltgeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryFractional crystallization (geology)LavaAndesiteGeochemistryGeologyVolcanic rockBasaltic andesiteMagmatismXenolithGeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesJournal of Asian Earth Sciences
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Geochemistry and early Palaeogene SHRIMP zircon ages for island arc granitoids of the Sierra Maestra, southeastern Cuba

2004

The Palaeogene volcanic arc successions of the Sierra Maestra, southeastern Cuba, were intruded by calc-alkaline, low- to medium-K tonalites and trondhjemites during the final stages of subduction and subsequent collision of the Caribbean oceanic plate with the North American continental plate. U‐Pb SHRIMP zircon dating of five granitoids yielded 206 Pb/ 238 U emplacement ages between 60.5F2.2 and 48.3F0.5 Ma. The granitoids are the result of subduction-related magmatism and have geochemical characteristics similar to those of magmas from intra-oceanic island-arcs such as the Izu Bonin‐Mariana arc and the New Britain island arc, Lesser Antilles. Major and trace element patterns suggest evol…

Basaltgeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryFractional crystallization (geology)SubductionVolcanic arcGeochemistryGeologyGeochemistry and PetrologyOceanic crustMagmatismIsland arcGeologyZirconChemical Geology
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