Identificador persistente para citar o vincular este elemento: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/42083
Título: Magma mixing induced by particle settling
Autores/as: Renggli, Christian J.
Wiesmaier, Sebastian
De Campos, Cristina P.
Hess, Kai-Uwe
Dingwell, Donald B.
Clasificación UNESCO: 250621 Vulcanología
Palabras clave: Liquid rope coiling
Magma mixing
Particle settling
Rhyolite–basalt
X-ray microCT
Fecha de publicación: 2016
Publicación seriada: Contributions to mineralogy and petrology 
Resumen: A time series of experiments at high temperature have been performed to investigate the influence of particle settling on magma mixing. A natural rhyolite glass was held above a natural basalt glass in a platinum crucible. After melting of the glasses at superliquidus temperatures, a platinum sphere was placed on the upper surface of the rhyolitic melt and sank into the experimental column (rhyolitic melt above basaltic melt). Upon falling through the rhyolitic–basaltic melt interface, the Pt sphere entrained a filament of rhyolitic melt in its further fall. The quenched products of the experiments were imaged using X-ray microCT methods. The images of our time series of experiments document the formation of a rhyolite filament as it is entrained into the underlying basalt by the falling platinum sphere. When the Pt particle reached the bottom of the crucible, the entrained rhyolitic filament started to ascend buoyantly up to the initial rhyolitic–basaltic interface. This generated a significant thickness increase of a comingled “melange” layer at the interface due to “liquid rope coiling” and piling up of the filament. As a consequence, the basalt/rhyolite interface was greatly enlarged and diffusive hybridisation greatly accelerated. Further, bubbles, originating at the interface, are observed to have risen into the overlying rhyolite dragging basalt filaments with them. Upon crossing the basalt/rhyolite interface, the bubbles have non-spherical shapes as they adapt to the differing surface tensions of basaltic and rhyolitic melts. Major element profiles, measured across the rhyolite filaments, exhibit asymmetrical shapes from the rhyolite into the basalt. Na and Ti reveal uphill diffusion from the rhyolite towards the interface in the filament cross sections. These results reveal the potential qualitative complexity of the mingling process between rhyolitic and basaltic magmas in the presence of sinking crystals. They imply that crystal-rich magma mingling may be expected to be accelerated with respect to crystal-poor systems. We urge the further fluid dynamic analysis of these phenomena, obtainable for the first time using detailed tomographic imaging.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/42083
ISSN: 0010-7999
DOI: 10.1007/s00410-016-1305-1
Fuente: Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology [ISSN 0010-7999], v. 171 (11), (Noviembre 2016)
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