11:30 AM - 11:45 AM
[SVC36-09] Mt. Fuji volcanic edifice and magmatic activity during the Hoshiyama stage inferred from the Mabusegawa debris avalanche deposits
Keywords:Mt.Fuji, debris avalanche deposits, lava blocks, magma
At the point about 20 km east of the summit of Mt. Fuji, a large outcrop appeared on the slope that had been denuded due to road construction. The outcrop is U-shaped and consists of three sides, northwest, northeast, and southeast, and is about 10 m high and over 200 m long. The top of outcrop is composed of pumice and scoria layer deposited during the AD1707 Hoei eruption. Beneath them are dozens of layers of scoria and ash deposited before the Subashiri stage. These tephra layers are divided into the Subashiri and Fujinomiya stages by the Fuji Black Soil layer, which is about 1 m-thick and suggests a period of marked decline in volcanic activity. In addition, a debris avalanche deposits with a thickness of 1 to 3 m are exposed at the bottom of the outcrop (about 7 to 8 m below the surface). The upper boundary slopes gently toward the east. The layer contains numerous subangular to angular lava blocks ranging in size from several cm to tens of cm. The layers are massive and non-stratified, but some parts have red oxidized structures. On the northwestern side, there are several cavities ~30 cm wide and ~1 m long in random directions, with wood chips and leaf fragments inside, which might be the remains of trees that were caught in the debris avalanche and fell. This layer is correlated with the Mabusegawa debris avalanche deposits in terms of its stratigraphy and distribution. To investigate the origin of the formation, we collected samples of the lava blocks, wood chips, and leaves.
First, Carbon-14 age of the leave is 18,931–18,764calBP (2σ calendar age range). This is the same period as the depositional age of the Lake Tanuki debris avalanche deposits distributed at the southwestern foot of the Mt. Fuji, which suggests that the southwestern to southeastern foot of Older-Fuji edifice collapsed several times at the end of the Hoshiyama stage. In addition, it was found that the lava blocks in the layer were derived from the lava flows that formed the volcanic edifice of Older-Fuji. About 50 lava blocks collected are 0.2 to 5.2 kg in weight and are 6 to 23 cm in size, mostly fresh basaltic lava blocks, but some red oxidized. We conducted thin-section observation and petrographic descriptions of the lava blocks. The texture, modal compositions, and size of phenocrysts are different in each block, which suggests that the blocks were derived from several different lava flows of Older-Fuji. On the other hand, there are many blocks containing plagioclase, olivine, and pyroxene phenocrysts. In particular, plagioclase phenocrysts are mixed with both normal and dusty zoning types, suggesting magma mixing prior to the eruption. Such characteristics have been reported in the many ejecta of Younger-Fuji, which suggests the universal mixing of large amount of basaltic magma originating from the deep part and a small amount of more felsic magma in the shallow part also occurred during the Hoshiyama stage.