4.7 Article

Origin of a rhyolite that intruded a geothermal well while drilling at the Krafla volcano, Iceland

Journal

GEOLOGY
Volume 39, Issue 3, Pages 231-234

Publisher

GEOLOGICAL SOC AMER, INC
DOI: 10.1130/G31393.1

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Funding

  1. International Continental Scientific Drilling Program
  2. U.S. National Science Foundation [EAR 0507625, EAR 0507518, EAR 0506882, EAR 0507181]

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Magma flowed into an exploratory geothermal well at 2.1 km depth being drilled in the Krafla central volcano in Iceland, creating a unique opportunity to study rhyolite magma in situ in a basaltic environment. The quenched magma is a partly vesicular, sparsely phyric, glass containing similar to 1.8% of dissolved volatiles. Based on calculated H2O-CO2 saturation pressures, it degassed at a pressure intermediate between hydrostatic and lithostatic, and geothermometry indicates that the crystals in the melt formed at similar to 900 degrees C. The glass shows no signs of hydrothermal alteration, but its hydrogen and oxygen isotopic ratios are much lower than those of typical mantle-derived magmas, indicating that this rhyolite originated by anhydrous mantle-derived magma assimilating partially melted hydrothermally altered basalts.

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