日本地球惑星科学連合2019年大会

講演情報

[E] 口頭発表

セッション記号 S (固体地球科学) » S-VC 火山学

[S-VC34] Connecting magma dynamics in vent-conduit system with surface expression of volcanic eruption

2019年5月30日(木) 09:00 〜 10:30 A07 (東京ベイ幕張ホール)

コンビーナ:三輪 学央(防災科学技術研究所)、下司 信夫(産業技術総合研究所 活断層・火山研究部門)、座長:三輪 学央Jacopo Taddeucci

10:15 〜 10:30

[SVC34-06] Mechanism of volatile transport from mafic to silicic magma upon mixing

*吉村 俊平1松本 亜希子1中川 光弘1 (1.北海道大学・地球惑星科学)

キーワード:マグマ、混合、揮発性成分

Introduction
Deep-derived, high-temperature mafic magma often injects into shallow-stored, low-temperature silicic magma, producing either well-mixed intermediate magma or mafic enclaves floating in host magma. Volatile transport from mafic to silicic magma accompanies magma mixing, and it may control volcanic activity (e.g., Roberge et al., 2009). However, the detailed mechanism of such volatile transport is unclear. In this study, we investigated how the gas was generated in mafic magma and transported to the silicic magma based on S and Cl analysis of Atchiyama rhyolitic lava that contains abundant basaltic enclaves.


Method
We observed Atchiyama biotite-rhyolite lava that erupted 1600 BP in Niijima Island (Isshiki, 1997), and analysed compositions of host rhyolite and basaltic enclaves. Cl mapping analysis was also performed on the area of enclave-host boundary to track the volatile transfer paths.


Results and discussion
Basaltic enclaves exhibited fine-grained groundmass composed of dendritic crystals, rhyolitic interstitial melt, and bubbles. The interstitial melt, which was compositionally distinguishable from the host rhyolite, was S-free (<50 ppm) and Cl-rich (1200 ppm). Melt inclusion analysis showed that the initial basaltic melt before mixing was S-rich (~4000 ppm) and Cl-poor (~430 ppm). These observations indicate that the basaltic magma cooled and crystallised rapidly upon injection, and the interstitial rhyolitic melt was produced as a result of crystallisation fractionation. Crystallisation-induced vesiculation (second boiling) occurred and S degassed completely, while Cl was concentrated in the interstitial melt.
Groundmass glass of host rhyolite was S-free and Cl-poor (~800 ppm). However, Cl mapping analysis revealed that the Cl content increased to 1200 ppm near the enclave margin. In addition, finger-like veins containing vapour-phase crystals developed from the enclave to far afield in host rhyolite, and the Cl content was also high near such veins. All these observations indicate that S- and Cl-rich gas was generated in crystallising enclave, and it was transported to the host rhyolitic magma via gas flow and diffusion.