4.7 Article

U-series histories of magmatic volatile phase and enclave development at Soufriere Hills Volcano, Montserrat

Journal

CHEMICAL GEOLOGY
Volume 559, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemgeo.2020.119957

Keywords

Soufriere Hills Volcano; Ra-226-(210)pb; Enclaves; Eruption triggers; Magmatic volatile phase; Copper

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council (ARC) [DP150100328]
  2. ARC Future Fellowship [FT120100440]
  3. Mineral Exploration Cooperative Research Centre - Australian Government's Cooperative Research Centre Program

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The study investigates the mass exchange history between mafic enclaves and andesite hosts during the 2010 eruption at Soufriere Hills Volcano, revealing the complexity of volatile and metal element transfer between magmas and the potential of enclaves as eruption triggers. Results suggest loss of a volatile phase and transport of metals within the deeper plumbing system during differentiation of magmas feeding SHV.
Injection of volatile-rich mafic magma prior to an eruption may trigger episodes of volcanism and can act to transfer metals from depth. However, petrologic knowledge of the timescales from mafic injection to eruption have thus far been focussed on mineral-scale studies of chemical zoning patterns. The study of mafic enclaves dispersed within eruption products can provide insights into the interaction between deep and shallow reservoirs. We combine U-238-Th-23(0)-Ra-226-Pb-210 isotope data with trace element concentrations across the interface of two contrasting mafic enclaves in contact with their host andesite from the 2010 eruption at Soufriere Hills Volcano (SHV), Montserrat to investigate the history of mass exchange between the mafic enclave and the andesite host. The application of these time-sensitive isotopes highlights complexities in the transfer of volatiles and metal elements between magmas and the enclaves' potential as eruption triggers. The enclaves exhibit (Pb-210/Ra-226)(0) ratios >1 consistent with volatile input to the subsurface plumbing system a few decades prior to eruption. Samples of the andesitic host, however, which make up the bulk of the eruptive products, have (Pb-210/Ra-226) <= 1 suggesting no net volatile gain in the decades leading up to eruption, or that melt-volatile interaction is on a timescale unresolvable by Pb-210-Ra-226 systematics (i.e. <2 years). Variations in trace elements such as Cu, Pb and Ba show loss of a magmatic volatile phase and transport of metals within the deeper part of the plumbing system during differentiation of magmas feeding SHV. Our results do not support that volatile transfer into the andesite via enclaves is a direct trigger of explosive eruptions although the enclaves are likely syn-eruptively formed. U-238-Th-23(0)-Ra-226-Pb-210 and trace element systematics at SHV support a role for fresh magma influx during periods of unrest, but long-term accumulation of the andesite.

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