Abstract

The trans-crustal magma system paradigm is forcing us to re-think processes responsible for magma evolution and eruption. A key concept in petrology is the liquid line of descent (LLD), which relates a series of liquids derived from a single parent, and therefore tracks the inverse of the crystallization path. It is common practice to attribute multiple magma compositions, and/or multiple melt compositions (from melt inclusions and matrix glass), to a single LLD. However, growing evidence for rapid, and often syn-eruptive, assembly of multiple magma components (crystals and melts) from different parts of a magmatic system suggests that erupted magma and melt compositions will not necessarily represent a single LLD, but instead may reflect the multiple paths in pressure–temperature space. Here, we use examples from mafic magmatic systems in both ocean island and arc settings to illustrate the range of melt compositions present in erupted samples, and to explore how they are generated, and how they interact. We highlight processes that may be deduced from mafic melt compositions, including the mixing of heterogeneous primitive liquids from the mantle, pre-eruptive magma storage at a range of crustal and sub-Moho depths, and syn-eruptive mixing of melts generated from these storage regions. The relative dominance of these signatures in the glasses depends largely on the water content of the melts. We conclude that preserved melt compositions provide information that is complementary to that recorded by the volatile contents of crystal-hosted melt inclusions and coexisting mineral compositions, which together can be used to address questions about both the pre- and syn-eruptive state of volcanic systems.This article is part of the Theo Murphy meeting issue ‘Magma reservoir architecture and dynamics’.

Highlights

  • Recent reviews of magmatic systems (e.g. [1,2,3,4,5,6]) emphasize their spatial extent, dynamic nature and rheological complexity

  • The same system will have a large range of melt compositions that reflect the P–T–φ conditions of magma storage; it is this melt compositional range that we explore in this paper

  • We examine end member paths of isobaric cooling (IBC; figures 2 and 3a,b) and isothermal decompression (ITD; figure 3c,d) as illustrated by plots of MgO versus K2O to track total crystallinity and Al2O3 to indicate the onset of feldspar crystallization, which is sensitive to PH2O

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Summary

Introduction

Recent reviews of magmatic systems (e.g. [1,2,3,4,5,6]) emphasize their spatial extent, dynamic nature and rheological complexity. Compositional trends produced by ITD, in contrast, start with decompression-driven melting of clinopyroxene, which causes an initial increase in MgO This is followed by rapid decreases in Al2O3 and increases in K2O that record extensive decompression-driven plagioclase crystallization (figure 3c,d). The kinetic effects of varying experimental time scales, in contrast, are small Both the model and experimental data illustrate the range of composition space that can be experienced by variably hydrous mafic melts that follow different P–T paths in a single magmatic system. These data have important implications for interpreting the range of melt compositions preserved in erupted material. We explore this approach using several rich datasets from mafic eruptions

Melt compositions in mafic ocean island volcanoes
Melt compositions in mafic arc magmas
Findings
Discussion and conclusion
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