EGU22-5279
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-5279
EGU General Assembly 2022
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Can Degassing-induced Undercooling and Crystallisation Control Eruptible Magma Volume? 

Mattia Pistone1, Fabio Arzilli2, Rachel Teasdale3, Richard Brooker4, Gianluca Iezzi5, and Jonathan Blundy6
Mattia Pistone et al.
  • 1University of Georgia, Geology, Athens, Georgia, United States of America (Mattia.Pistone@uga.edu)
  • 2University of Camerino, School of Science and Technology, Camerino, Italy (fabio.arzilli@unicam.it)
  • 3California State University, Geological and Environmental Sciences Department, Chico, California, 95929, United States of America (rteasdale@csuchico.edu)
  • 4University of Bristol, School of Earth Sciences, Bristol, United Kingdom (richard.brooker@bristol.ac.uk)
  • 5Università G. D’Annunzio, Department of Engineering and Geology, Chieti, Italy (gianluca.iezzi@unich.it)
  • 6University of Oxford, Department of Earth Sciences, Oxford, United Kingdom (jonathan.blundy@earth.ox.ac.uk)

Assessing the likelihood, intensity, style, and magnitude of eruptions is vital for societies living near active volcanoes worldwide. The intensity and magnitude of volcanic eruptions are controlled by multiple factors, but magma degassing upon decompression plays a critical role, causing growth of crystals that eventually lock up the magma. H2O–CO2 fluid composition modulate magma undercooling and crystallisation with H2O degassing increasing the liquidus temperature and CO2 degassing decreasing it. Using published experiments, we correlate magma undercooling with the crystal volume fraction and evaluate empirically the conditions that favour ascent of crystal-poor versus crystal-rich magmas. Magma crystallinity and undercooling are then examined for previous mafic and felsic eruptions with known erupted volumes, crystallinity of erupted tephra, and released excess SO2. The latter parameter is suggestive of excess fluid in the subvolcanic reservoir prior to eruption. We observe that H2O-rich systems with crystal volume fractions > 0.2 and undercooling > 100 °C tend to erupt ≤ 5 km3 of magma, whilst CO2-rich systems with crystal fractions < 0.2 and undercooling < 110 °C erupt > 10 km3 of magma. Our results suggest that the composition of magmatic fluids exercises an important control on eruptible volumes by suppressing or enhancing decompression crystallisation.

How to cite: Pistone, M., Arzilli, F., Teasdale, R., Brooker, R., Iezzi, G., and Blundy, J.: Can Degassing-induced Undercooling and Crystallisation Control Eruptible Magma Volume? , EGU General Assembly 2022, Vienna, Austria, 23–27 May 2022, EGU22-5279, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-5279, 2022.

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