Abstract

Explosive eruptions of trachytic to trachyandesitic composition produced thick and widespread pyroclastic deposits during the recent volcanic activity of Piton des Neiges (PdN), the largest volcano of La Réunion Island (France). However, without precise geochronology for these eruptions, the future behavior of the dormant volcano is difficult to assess. New high-resolution single crystal 40Ar/39Ar dates on alkali feldspar, together with petrochemical data on juvenile clasts, indicate that instead of multiple and small eruptions, PdN produced a single large-volume event (“Dalle Soudée” eruption) at 198.8 ± 2.5 kyrs in which its entire crustal plumbing system was reactivated by mafic injections in the silicic reservoir. After 60 kyrs of quiescence, PdN activity resumed with several small silicic eruptions. From a dome-forming trachytic event (Belouve eruption) represented by some of the most recent block-and-ash flow deposits near the present-day summit we report in-situ 238U/230Th disequilibrium dates on pristine zircons. Sanidine and zircon crystalized at ca. 875 °C in the trachytic magma. For this event, the corresponding 238U/230Th isochron age of the zircons overlaps with the youngest 40Ar/39Ar dates on single sanidine crystals and yields an age of 42.7 ± 3.8 kyr. The variability in trace elements of zircon argues for a prolonged crystallization during this phase prior to eruption. Similarly, the 40Ar/39Ar sanidine dates show a significant spread in both eruptions, covering ca. 80 kyrs, uncommon for a method with a predicted low closure temperature. Such a pattern of age distribution argues for the presence of inherited argon in sanidines and for long residence times in the magma reservoir. The recent eruptive history of Piton des Neiges, involving evolved magma compositions, long-living silicic reservoirs and millennia-long quiescence in volcanic activity, suggests that future potentially hazardous eruptions from this volcano cannot be excluded.

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