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Journal ArticleDOI

A new model for the emplacement of Columbia River basalts as large, inflated Pahoehoe Lava Flow Fields

TLDR
In this paper, it was shown that large-scale compound pahoehoe lava flows can thicken by at least an order of magnitude through gradual inflation and the same mechanism has been proposed for larger (10-20 km3) phoehoe flows in Iceland.
Abstract
Extensive flows of the Columbia River Basalt (CRB) Group in Washington, Oregon, and Idaho are dominantly inflated compound pahoehoe sheet lavas. Early studies recognized that CRB lavas are compound pahoehoe flows, with textures suggesting low flow velocities, but it was thought that the great thickness and extent of the major flows required very rapid emplacement as turbulent floods of lava over a period of days or weeks. However, small volume (< 1 km³) compound pahoehoe flows on Kilauea, Hawai'i, demonstrate that such flows can thicken by at least an order of magnitude through gradual inflation and the same mechanism has been proposed for larger (10–20 km3) pahoehoe flows in Iceland. The vertical distribution of vesicles and other morphologic features within CRB lava flows indicate that they grew similarly by inflation. Small pahoehoe lobes at the base and top of many CRB pahoehoe lava flows indicate emplacement in a gradual, piecemeal manner rather than as a single flood. We propose that each thick CRB sheet flow was active for months to years and that each group of flows produced by a single eruption (a flow field) was emplaced slowly over many years.

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Citations
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Large igneous provinces and mass extinctions

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compare the timing of mass extinctions with the formation age of large igneous provinces and reveal a close correspondence in five cases, but previous claims that all such provinces coincide with extinction events are unduly optimistic.
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Volcanism in Iceland in historical time: Volcano types, eruption styles and eruptive history

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identified 205 eruptions in historical time by detailed mapping and dating of events along with extensive research on documentation of volcanic activity in historical chronicles and classified them into three categories: effusive, effusive and mixed.
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How local stresses control magma-chamber ruptures, dyke injections, and eruptions in composite volcanoes

TL;DR: In this paper, a review of analytical and numerical models of local stresses around magma chambers, as well as analytical models and numerical examples of dyke-injection and eruption frequencies are presented.
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Seismic volcanostratigraphy of large-volume basaltic extrusive complexes on rifted margins

TL;DR: In this article, seismic reflection data along the Atlantic and Western Australia rifted margins reveals six characteristic volcanic seismic facies units named (1) Landward flows, (2) Lava Delta, (3) Inner Flows, (4) Inner Seaward Dipping Reflectors (Inner SDR), (5) Outer High, and (6) Outer SDR).
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The Importance of Pahoehoe

TL;DR: This paper showed that large terrestrial basaltic flow fields studied to date, including flood basalts, were emplaced as thermally efficient, inflated, compound pahoehoe sheet flows.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Emplacement and inflation of pahoehoe sheet flows: observations and measurements of active lava flows on Kilauea volcano, Hawaii

TL;DR: Inflated sheet flows from Kilauea and Mauna Loa are morphologically similar to some thick Icelandic and submarine sheet flows, suggesting a similar mechanism of emplacement as discussed by the authors.
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The Laki (Skaftár Fires) and Grímsvötn eruptions in 1783–1785

TL;DR: The Skaftar Fires eruption in southern Iceland lasted for eight months during 1783 to 1784, and produced one of the largest basaltic lava flows in historic times (14.7±1.0 km3).
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Compound and simple lava flows and flood basalts

TL;DR: A logical definition of lava flow must embrace both simple lava sheets and substantial lava shields (compound lava flows) up to 600 m high as mentioned in this paper, and the most extensive and far-reaching flows are simple lava flows, defined as those lavas which are not divisible into flow-units.
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Flood Basalt Volcanism During the Past 250 Million Years

TL;DR: There were 11 distinct episodes of major continental flood basalt volcanism during the past 250 million years, and the initiation dates of the episodes are close to the estimated dates of mass extinctions of marine organisms.
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Structure, and origin by injection of lava under surface crust, of tumuli, “lava rises”, “lava-rise pits”, and “lava-inflation clefts” in Hawaii

TL;DR: Tumuli are positive topographic features that are common on Hawaiian pahoehoe lava flow fields, particularly on shallow slopes, and 75 measured examples are presented here to document the size range.
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