11:30 AM - 11:45 AM
[SVC29-08] Comparison of redox states of volcanic glass and gas at Bromo volcano, Indonesia: Implications for the degassing process
Keywords:Redox state, Volcanic glass, Volcanic gas, XANES, Bromo volcano
We examined the redox state of magma recorded in juvenile glass particles from an ash-forming eruption at Bromo volcano, Indonesia, to obtain the implications for its degassing process. An ash sample was collected by real-time sampling from the ash-forming eruption on 24 March 2011, and contains brown colored juvenile glasses. Detailed observations of texture under a FE-EPMA show that the brown juvenile glasses lack nanolites in their groundmass. The compositions of groundmass glass and phenocrysts in the brown glass particles indicate a pre-eruptive magma temperature of 1000 ± 40 °C. The Fe3+/ΣFe ratios of the brown glasses were determined to be 0.15–0.24 using synchrotron-based Fe–K edge micro XANES spectroscopy. From these data, the oxygen fugacity of the magma is estimated to be in the range of 10−11.2 to 10−9.8, giving a redox state of ΔQFM = 0.58 ± 0.45. The redox state of magma estimated from the brown glasses is more reduced than that of volcanic gas emitted during the open-vent degassing phase (~700 °C and ΔQFM of 1.8). The low temperature and oxidized condition of the volcanic gas can be explained by closed-system cooling from 1000 to 700 °C in the gas phase after outgassing, suggesting that the magma head was located deeper during the open-vent degassing phase than during the ash-forming eruption.