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Geochemistry and Degassing Systematics of Silicate Magma at Ol Doinyo Lengai, Tanzania

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dc.creator De Moor, J. M.
dc.creator Fischer, Tobias
dc.creator King, Penelope L.
dc.creator Hilton, David R.
dc.creator Sharp, Z. D.
dc.creator Barry, Peter H.
dc.creator Umaña, Carlos J. R.
dc.creator Mangasini, Frank
dc.date 2016-07-11T10:10:10Z
dc.date 2016-07-11T10:10:10Z
dc.date 2009-11
dc.date.accessioned 2018-03-27T08:32:33Z
dc.date.available 2018-03-27T08:32:33Z
dc.identifier de Moor, J., Fischer, T.P., King, P.L., Hilton, D.R., Sharp, Z.D., Barry, P.H., Ramirez, C. and Mangasini, F., 2009, December. Geochemistry and degassing systematics of silicate magma at Ol Doinyo Lengai, Tanzania. In AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts (Vol. 1, p. 2069).
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11810/3048
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11810/3048
dc.description Full text can be accessed at http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2009AGUFM.V13E2069D
dc.description Ol Doinyo Lengai (OL) volcano is unique in that it produces natro-carbonatite lavas. However, every ~25 years the volcano explosively erupts nephelinitic ash. OL entered an explosive phase in September 2007, which lasted until November 2008, and carbonatite activity resumed early in 2009. This study assesses the composition of the 2007-2009 eruptive products and volatiles to characterize degassing and magmatic processes during the explosive eruption. Ash samples collected in 2008 and 2009 are extremely crystal-rich with scarce scoria. Bulk compositions show that the ash is dominated by alkali- and volatile-rich silicate ash with a secondary carbonatite component (SiO2 37.3%, CO3 4.3%, MgO 1.8%, CaO 15.4%, Na2O 11.2%, K2O 3.5%, S 0.14%, Cl 0.20%). Electron microprobe analyses of vesicular scoria show that the matrix glass (SiO2 41.0%, Na22 but enriched in incompatible elements compared to nepheline-hosted glass inclusions (SiO2 43.2%, Na2O 15.8%). S correlates positively with Cl and F in nepheline-hosted glass inclusions (S 0.2-0.4%, Cl 0.3-0.5%, F 0.3-0.8%) showing that these species behaved incompatibly and were not saturated in the parental melt. Matrix glass extends to higher S concentrations (up to 0.7%) at relatively constant Cl and F (Cl ~0.5%, F ~0.7%) resulting in increasing S/Cl and S/F in the residual melt. This is interpreted to reflect Cl and F saturation in the melt due to further crystallization and partitioning of these species into the gas phase while S was undersaturated. Reflectance FTIR shows that the matrix glass has no detectible H2O and ~3% CO2. Glass inclusions have
dc.language en
dc.subject Geochemistry
dc.subject Intra-plate processes
dc.subject Stable isotope geochemistry
dc.subject Explosive volcanism
dc.subject Volcanic gases
dc.title Geochemistry and Degassing Systematics of Silicate Magma at Ol Doinyo Lengai, Tanzania
dc.type Journal Article


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