12:00 PM - 12:15 PM
[SVC30-12] Fracture generation during lava–ice interaction at andesitic stratovolcanoes
Keywords:glaciovolcanism, lava flow, fracture, andesite
The fractures are defined by opposing planes that typically intersect at angles <20° along horizontal axial valleys, which are located inward of the lava margin at distances of 5–30 cm. The key features on individual fracture planes are: (1) “chisel marks” that are aligned parallel to the axial valley and are regularly spaced on each plane with distances that range from 0.5 to 5 cm; (2) “wall offsets” that strike perpendicular to chisel marks and have mm- to cm-scale relief; and (3) “bridges” that are 1–4 cm-thick slabs of stretched and curved lava that connect opposing fracture planes over lengths <20 cm.
We interpret that chisel marks on each plane reflect the cyclic process of fracture propagation into viscous lava at spacings that depend on the cooling rate at the lava surface and the effective viscosity of the lava. Wall offsets represent the breakage of bridges during opening of fractures along the lava (i.e., margin-parallel directions); therefore, the thicknesses and curvatures of lava bridges provide additional information on lava strain rates. We provide preliminary constraints for the cooling rate and effective viscosity of this andesitic lava during its emplacement, and use textural and geochemical data from electron probe microanalysis to explore how melt composition and crystallinity affected the full rheology.
