Abstract
AbstractTwo late Quaternary ash-flow tuffs erupted as single flow units from the Menengai caldera volcano, Kenya, show marked facies variations. Dense welding of the tuffs close to source may have been promoted by their peralkaline trachyte compositions. Coarse, near-vent breccias are partly welded and were emplaced as lithic-rich parts of the body of pyroclastic flows. Non-welded tuff forms the bulk of the outflow sheets which include valley-fill deposits up to 520 m above the present caldera rim, indicating ash-flow generation by collapse of moderately high eruption columns. The flows overran varied topography which controlled development of ash-flow tuff facies. On hilly terrain, the flows became turbulent and separated into a lithic-rich, rapidly deposited part and a fine-grained lithic-and crystal-poor part which was subsequently deposited farther from source. Caldera walls belonging to an earlier caldera probably formed a major barrier to the spread of the second ash-flow from its site of collapse. There are many similarities in the facies variations in these peralkaline tuffs and subalkaline tuffs. Differences in welding characteristics and the shape of ash particles reflect the lower viscosity of peralkaline magma.
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