4.5 Article

The Bishop Tuff giant magma body: an alternative to the Standard Model

Journal

CONTRIBUTIONS TO MINERALOGY AND PETROLOGY
Volume 166, Issue 3, Pages 755-775

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00410-013-0901-6

Keywords

Bishop Tuff; High-silica rhyolite; Magma body zonation

Funding

  1. NSF [EAR-0948528, EAR-0948734]
  2. Directorate For Geosciences
  3. Division Of Earth Sciences [1151337, 0948528] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  4. Division Of Earth Sciences
  5. Directorate For Geosciences [1321924] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The Bishop Tuff, one of the most extensively studied high-silica rhyolite bodies in the world, is usually considered as the archetypical example of a deposit formed from a magma body characterized by thermal and compositional vertical stratification-what we call the Standard Model for the Bishop magma body. We present here new geothermometry and geobarometry results derived using a large database of previously published quartz-hosted glass inclusion compositions. Assuming equilibrium between melt and an assemblage composed of quartz, +/- plagioclase, +/- sanidine, +zircon, +/- fluid, we use Zr contents in glass inclusions to derive quartz crystallization temperatures, and we use (1) silica contents in glass, (2) projection of glass compositions onto the haplogranitic (quartz-albite-orthoclase) ternary, and (3) phase equilibria calculations using rhyolite-MELTS, to constrain crystallization pressures. We find crystallization temperatures of similar to 740-750 A degrees C for all inclusions from both early- and late-erupted pumice. Crystallization pressures for both early- and late-erupted inclusions are also very similar to each other, with averages of similar to 175-200 MPa. We find no evidence of late-erupted inclusions having been entrapped at higher temperatures or pressures than early-erupted inclusions, as would be expected by the Standard Model. We argue that the thermal gradient inferred from Fe-Ti oxides-the backbone of the Standard Model-does not reflect equilibrium pre-eruptive conditions; we also note that H2O-CO2 systematics of glass inclusions yields overlapping pressure ranges for early- and late-erupted inclusions, similar to the results presented here; and we show that glass inclusion and phenocryst compositions show bimodal distributions, suggestive of compositional separation between early- and late-erupted populations. These findings are inconsistent with the Standard Model. The similarity in crystallization conditions and the compositional separation between early- and late-erupted magmas suggest that two laterally juxtaposed independent magma reservoirs existed in the same region at the same time and co-erupted to form the Long Valley Caldera and the Bishop Tuff. This hypothesis would explain the lack of mixing between early- and late-erupted crystal populations in pumice clasts; it could also explain the inferred eruption pattern-which resulted in early-erupted magmas being deposited only to the south of the caldera-if the early-erupted magma body resided to the south and the late-erupted magma body was located to the north. Our alternative model is consistent with the patchy distribution of thermal anomalies and the inference of co-eruption of distinct magma types in active volcanic areas such as the central Taupo Volcanic Zone.

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