4.5 Article

Mechanisms driving polymagmatic activity at a monogenetic volcano, Udo, Jeju Island, South Korea

期刊

CONTRIBUTIONS TO MINERALOGY AND PETROLOGY
卷 160, 期 6, 页码 931-950

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00410-010-0515-1

关键词

Monogenetic volcanism; Basalt geochemistry; Jeju Island; Plumbing system; Alkali basalt

资金

  1. Foundation for Research, Science and Technology [MAUX0808]
  2. Ministry of Education, Science and Technology [2009-0079427]
  3. Massey University
  4. New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation & Employment (MBIE) [MAUX0808] Funding Source: New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation & Employment (MBIE)

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High-resolution, stratigraphically ordered samples of the Udo tuff cone and lava shield offshore of Jeju Island, South Korea, show complex geochemical variation in the basaltic magmas that fed the eruption sequence. The eruption began explosively, producing phreatomagmatic deposits with relatively evolved alkali magma. The magma became more primitive over the course of the eruption, but the last magma to be explosively erupted had shifted back to a relatively evolved composition. A separate sub-alkali magma batch was subsequently effusively erupted to form a lava shield. Absence of weathering and only minor reworking between the tuff and overlying lava implies that there was no significant time break between the eruptions of the two magma batches. Modelling of the alkali magma suggests that it was generared from a parent melt in garnet peridotite at c. 3 to 3.5 GPa and underwent mainly clino-pyroxene + olivine +/- spinel fractionation at c. 1.5 to 2 GPa. The sub-alkali magma was, by contrast, generated from a chemically different peridotite with residual garnet at c. 2.5 GPa and evolved through olivine fractionation at a shallower level compared to its alkali contemporary. The continuous chemostratigraphic trend in the tuff cone, from relatively evolved to primitive and back to evolved, is interpreted to have resulted from a magma batch having risen through a single dyke and erupted the batch's head, core and margins, respectively. The alkali magma acted as a path-opener for the sub-alkali magma. The occurrence of the two distinct batches suggests that different magmatic systems in the Jeju Island Volcanic Field have interacted throughout its history. The polymagmatic nature of this monogenetic eruption has important implications for hazard forecasting and for our understanding of basaltic field volcanism.

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