TY - JOUR
T1 - Mantle to surface degassing of alkalic magmas at Erebus volcano, Antarctica
AU - Oppenheimer, Clive
AU - Moretti, Roberto
AU - Kyle, Philip R.
AU - Eschenbacher, Al
AU - Lowenstern, Jacob B.
AU - Hervig, Richard
AU - Dunbar, Nelia W.
N1 - Funding Information:
Fieldwork was supported by grants ANT-0538414 and ANT-0838817 from the Office of Polar Programs ( National Science Foundation ). CO thanks the Leverhulme Trust for a Fellowship, and the European Research Council (DEMONS project) and NERC National Centre for Earth Observation for funding. Le Studium receives support from the European Regional Development Fund. RM acknowledges financial support from PRIN 2007 funds of the Ministry of University and Research of the Italian Government . We thank Bruno Scaillet and Michel Pichavant for discussions, Don Mullally and Pete Zemek at MIDAC for FTIR support, Mike Burton for the infrared retrieval code, and Bill McIntosh and Nelia Dunbar for collaboration in the fieldwork. We are very grateful to Jon Blundy and an anonymous referee for comments that led to significant improvements to the original manuscript, and to Richard Carlson for his editorial supervision and advice.
PY - 2011/6/15
Y1 - 2011/6/15
N2 - Continental intraplate volcanoes, such as Erebus volcano, Antarctica, are associated with extensional tectonics, mantle upwelling and high heat flow. Typically, erupted magmas are alkaline and rich in volatiles (especially CO2), inherited from low degrees of partial melting of mantle sources. We examine the degassing of the magmatic system at Erebus volcano using melt inclusion data and high temporal resolution open-path Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopic measurements of gas emissions from the active lava lake. Remarkably different gas signatures are associated with passive and explosive gas emissions, representative of volatile contents and redox conditions that reveal contrasting shallow and deep degassing sources. We show that this unexpected degassing signature provides a unique probe for magma differentiation and transfer of CO2-rich oxidised fluids from the mantle to the surface, and evaluate how these processes operate in time and space. Extensive crystallisation driven by CO2 fluxing is responsible for isobaric fractionation of parental basanite magmas close to their source depth. Magma deeper than 4kbar equilibrates under vapour-buffered conditions. At shallower depths, CO2-rich fluids accumulate and are then released either via convection-driven, open-system gas loss or as closed-system slugs that ascend and result in Strombolian eruptions in the lava lake. The open-system gases have a reduced state (below the QFM buffer) whereas the closed-system gases preserve their deep oxidised signatures (close to the NNO buffer).
AB - Continental intraplate volcanoes, such as Erebus volcano, Antarctica, are associated with extensional tectonics, mantle upwelling and high heat flow. Typically, erupted magmas are alkaline and rich in volatiles (especially CO2), inherited from low degrees of partial melting of mantle sources. We examine the degassing of the magmatic system at Erebus volcano using melt inclusion data and high temporal resolution open-path Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopic measurements of gas emissions from the active lava lake. Remarkably different gas signatures are associated with passive and explosive gas emissions, representative of volatile contents and redox conditions that reveal contrasting shallow and deep degassing sources. We show that this unexpected degassing signature provides a unique probe for magma differentiation and transfer of CO2-rich oxidised fluids from the mantle to the surface, and evaluate how these processes operate in time and space. Extensive crystallisation driven by CO2 fluxing is responsible for isobaric fractionation of parental basanite magmas close to their source depth. Magma deeper than 4kbar equilibrates under vapour-buffered conditions. At shallower depths, CO2-rich fluids accumulate and are then released either via convection-driven, open-system gas loss or as closed-system slugs that ascend and result in Strombolian eruptions in the lava lake. The open-system gases have a reduced state (below the QFM buffer) whereas the closed-system gases preserve their deep oxidised signatures (close to the NNO buffer).
KW - Degassing
KW - Lava lake
KW - Melt inclusions
KW - Redox
KW - Strombolian eruptions
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U2 - 10.1016/j.epsl.2011.04.005
DO - 10.1016/j.epsl.2011.04.005
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:79956310732
SN - 0012-821X
VL - 306
SP - 261
EP - 271
JO - Earth and Planetary Sciences Letters
JF - Earth and Planetary Sciences Letters
IS - 3-4
ER -