Artículos de revistas
Insights for crystal mush storage utilizing mafc enclaves from the 2011–12 Cordón Caulle eruption
Fecha
2022Registro en:
Scientifc Reports (2022) 12:9734
10.1038/s41598-022-13305-y
Autor
Winslow, Heather
Ruprecht, Philipp
Gonnermann, Helge M.
Phelps, Patrick R.
Muñoz Sáez, Carolina
Delgado de la Puente, Francisco Javier
Pritchard, Matthew
Amigo, Alvaro
Institución
Resumen
Two distinct types of rare crystal-rich mafic enclaves have been identified in the rhyolite lava flow from the 2011-12 Cordon Caulle eruption (Southern Andean Volcanic Zone, SVZ). The majority of mafic enclaves are coarsely crystalline with interlocking olivine-clinopyroxene-plagioclase textures and irregular shaped vesicles filling the crystal framework. These enclaves are interpreted as pieces of crystal-rich magma mush underlying a crystal-poor rhyolitic magma body that has fed recent silicic eruptions at Cordon Caulle. A second type of porphyritic enclaves, with restricted mineral chemistry and spherical vesicles, represents small-volume injections into the rhyolite magma. Both types of enclaves are basaltic end-members (up to 9.3 wt% MgO and 50-53 wt% SiO2) in comparison to enclaves erupted globally. The Cordon Caulle enclaves also have one of the largest compositional gaps on record between the basaltic enclaves and the rhyolite host at 17 wt% SiO2. Interstitial melt in the coarsely-crystalline enclaves is compositionally identical to their rhyolitic host, suggesting that the crystal-poor rhyolite magma was derived directly from the underlying basaltic magma mush through efficient melt extraction. We suggest the 2011-12 rhyolitic eruption was generated from a primitive basaltic crystal-rich mush that short-circuited the typical full range of magmatic differentiation in a single step.