Abstract

Laboratory experiments investigating syn-eruptive crystallization are fundamental for interpreting crystal and vesicle textures in pyroclasts. Previous experiments have advanced our understanding by varying decompression and cooling pathways, volatile components, and melt composition. However, they have largely failed to produce the high crystal number densities seen in many cryptodome and dome samples. This is feasibly due to the relatively simple decompression pathways employed in experimental studies. In this study, we approach the problem by exploring non-linear decompression pathways. We present two series of experiments: (1) decompression from low initial starting pressure and (2) a compression-and-release step after the initial decompression. The purpose of each series was to simulate (1) decompression of magma that stalls during ascent and (2) pressure cycling that occurs in non-erupted magma during episodic explosive activity. The experiments were carried out on a synthetic rhyodacite (SiO2 = 69 wt%) held initially at 50 MPa and 885°C then decompressed at rates of 0.026 and 0.05 MPa s−1 to 10 MPa A subset of experiments was then subjected to a compression step to 110 MPa followed by near-instantaneous release back to 10 MPa. A substantial volume fraction of dendritic microlites (ϕxtl = 0.27–0.32, Na = 4.79 × 103 mm–2) formed during the initial hold at 50 MPa; additional crystallization during subsequent decompression to ≥ 10 MPa was minimal, as evidenced by only small increases in crystallinity (ϕxtl = 0.28–0.33) and comparable crystal number densities (4.11–7.81 × 103 mm–2). Samples that underwent recompression followed by a second decompression showed no increase in crystal volume fraction but did show extensive disruption of the initial dendritic, box-work microlite structures that produced high number densities (Na = 43.5–87.2 × 103 mm–2) of small individual crystals. The disruption was driven by a combination of rapid vesiculation, expansion and resulting shear along the capsule walls. From these results, we suggest that high crystal number densities may be a signature of rapid deformation occurring after magma stalling in the subsurface, perhaps related to pressure cycling and accompanying rapid changes in vesicularity during repeated small and shallow-sourced explosions. We compare our experiments to pyroclasts from shallow intrusions that preceded the 18 May 1980 eruption of Mount St Helens. These pyroclasts were erupted both prior to 18 May, during episodic precursory explosive activity, and by the 18 May initial lateral blast. The pattern of precursory activity indicates multiple episodes of pressurization (prior to explosive events) and rapid decompression (during explosive events) that we use to illustrate the significance of our experimental results.

Highlights

  • MATERIALS AND METHODSWhen referenced against experimental equivalents, crystal and vesicle textures in the products of volcanic eruptions provide key insights into magmatic processes (Marsh, 1998; Hammer, 2008; Cashman, 2020)

  • An experiment held at 10 MPa for 6 h has a slightly higher crystallinity that suggests a small amount of additional crystallization

  • Because the crystallinities of our decompression experiments are similar to the initial values, the crystallinity of the sample decompressed at a rate of 0.05 MPa s−1 is slightly higher, we assume little to no crystallization occurred during decompression (13–26 min) or within 1 h of dwell time after reaching 10 MPa

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Summary

Introduction

MATERIALS AND METHODSWhen referenced against experimental equivalents, crystal and vesicle textures in the products of volcanic eruptions provide key insights into magmatic processes (Marsh, 1998; Hammer, 2008; Cashman, 2020). Crystals can influence nucleation and growth of gas bubbles, the overall degassing efficiency of the magma, and the intensity of volcanic eruptions (e.g., Wright et al, 2009; Okumura et al, 2012; Martel and Iacono-Marziano, 2015; Lindoo et al, 2017; deGraffenried et al, 2019). For this reason, crystal and bubble textures are used to constrain threshold conditions that determine shifts in eruptive style. The complex dendritic crystal textures that characterize experimental charges are rarely observed in volcanic pyroclasts

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