EGU22-8042, updated on 28 Mar 2022
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-8042
EGU General Assembly 2022
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

High-Mg amphibole and bulk-rock composition from Ciomadul dacitic pumices suggest rapid eruption trigger by strongly hydrous mafic magma recharge

Barbara Cserép1,2, Szabolcs Harangi1,2, Saskia Erdmann3, Zoltán Kovács2, and Réka Lukács4
Barbara Cserép et al.
  • 1Eötvös Loránd University, Institute of Geography and Earth Sciences, Department of Petrology and Geochemistry, Budapest, Hungary
  • 2MTA-ELTE Volcanology Research Group, Budapest, Hungary
  • 3Institut des Sciences de la Terre d'Orléans (ISTO), Université d'Orléans‐CNRS‐BRGM, UMR 7327, Orléans, France
  • 4Institute for Geological and Geochemical Research, Research Centre for Astronomy and Earth Sciences, Eötvös Loránd Research Network (ELKH), Budapest, Hungary

By investigating fossil eruption products, we can better understand the behaviour of volcanoes and the processes occurring well beneath the volcanic edifice, leading to eruptions. In a felsic, crystal-rich (> 50 volume%), long-dormant mushy system, one of the most critical rejuvenation factors is the addition of hot mafic magma. In the case of Ciomadul volcano (Southeast Carpathians), a dominantly explosive eruption phase occurred at 56-50 ka following a ca. 40 kyr long dormancy. Three eruption units were studied in detail: Băile Tuşnad (Ee5/1tf), the Covasna–Harghita frontier (Ee5/1kh) and Mohoş roadcut (Ee5/1mo). Pumices from these locations have relatively high-Mg values (avg. of 0.56-0.62 mol%) and similar Sr/Y (147-157, but 225 in the Ee5/1tf) and Dy/Yb (1.71-1.73, but 1.89 in Ee5/1tf) ratios akin to the adakite-like rocks. Variation of these bulk pumice as well as the titanite trace element ratios indicates early garnet fractionation or residual garnet in the mantle source region. Trace element signature of the pumices shows strong enrichment of Ba and Sr and a depletion in heavy REE suggesting that the primary magmas originated by partial melting of strongly metasomatized lithospheric mantle.

Mineralogy of the pumices is plagioclase, amphibole and biotite phenocrysts and apatite, titanite, zircon and FeTi oxide accessories. Mafic crystal clots of orthopyroxene, clinopyroxene surrounded by amphibole occur occasionally. Among the phenocrysts, amphibole shows a complex compositional zoning. One of the most particular features is the appearance of high-Mg and low-Al cores, found very rarely, if any, within amphibole, worldwide. Trace element composition of amphiboles shows also considerable variation and suggest crystallization at various magmatic environments. The high-Mg and low-Al amphibole xenocrysts have also peculiar rare earth element patterns: they have relatively low total REE content and a strong depletion in heavy REE. This REE pattern is akin to the amphiboles found in metasomatized spinel harzburgites and xenoliths showing melt-solid reaction. We assume that these amphiboles could have been a near-liquidus phase consistent with an ultrahydrous equilibrium melt. Trace element composition of these early formed amphiboles is thought to reflect the composition of the amphiboles at the source region, i.e. shows an inherited nature. The strongly hydrous nature of the primary magmas is reflected also by the incongruent transition from pyroxenes to amphiboles as shown by the mafic clot textures.

Petrological features of the pumices suggest that eruption took place by reactivation of a relatively cold (T=700-775 °C), dacitic crystal mush. Rejuvenation was triggered by recharge of hydrous, less viscous mafic magma carrying the early formed crystal assemblage. Reheating and volatile flux initiated rapid remelting, magma ascent and eruption as indicated by thin overgrowth in amphibole and plagioclase and the lack of reaction zone around amphibole. This eruption scenario might have an implication for rapid reactivation after long dormancy in case of apparently inactive volcanoes.

This research was supported by the Hungarian National Research, Development and Innovation Fund (NKFIH) within K135179 project and the ÚNKP-21-3 New National Excellence Program of the Ministry for Innovation and Technology from the source of the NKFIH.

How to cite: Cserép, B., Harangi, S., Erdmann, S., Kovács, Z., and Lukács, R.: High-Mg amphibole and bulk-rock composition from Ciomadul dacitic pumices suggest rapid eruption trigger by strongly hydrous mafic magma recharge, EGU General Assembly 2022, Vienna, Austria, 23–27 May 2022, EGU22-8042, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-8042, 2022.

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