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Chapter 16 Pre-eruptive vapour and its role in controlling eruption style and longevity at Soufrière Hills Volcano
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References
2014
Year
Magmatic ProcessVolcanic Gas ChemistryVolcanologyEngineeringVolcanismChemistryEarth ScienceGeophysicsChapter 16Volcanic ProcessMelt InclusionsMafic InclusionsMaterials ScienceMagmatismSoufrière Hills VolcanoIgneous PetrogenesisGeologyRock PropertiesEruption LongevityGeochemistryIgneous ProcessEruption StylePetrologyPyroclastic Flow
Abstract We use volatiles in melt inclusions and nominally anhydrous phenocrysts, with volcanic gas flux and composition, and textural analysis of mafic inclusions to estimate the mass of exsolved vapour prior to eruption at Soufrière Hills Volcano (SHV). Pre-eruptive andesite coexists with exsolved vapour comprising 1.6–2.4 wt% of the bulk magma. The water content of orthopyroxenes indicates a zone of magma storage at pressures of approximately 200–300 MPa, whereas melt inclusions have equilibrated at shallower pressures. Inclusions containing >3 wt% H 2 O are enriched in CO 2 , suggesting flushing with CO 2 -rich gases. Intruding mafic magma contains >8 wt% H 2 O at 200–300 MPa. Rapid quenching is accompanied by crystallization and vesiculation. Upon entrainment into the andesite, mafic inclusions may undergo disaggregation, where expansion of volatiles in the interior overcomes the strength of the crystal frameworks, thereby recharging the vapour content of the andesite. Exsolved vapour may amount to 4.3–8.2 vol% at 300 MPa, with implications for eruption longevity and volume; we estimate the magma reservoir volume to be 60–200 km 3 . Exsolved vapour may account for the small volume change at depth during eruptions from geodetic models, and has implications for magma flow: exsolution is likely to be in equilibrium during rapid magma ascent, with little nucleation of new bubbles.
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