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Magma Generation at a Large, Hyperactive Silicic Volcano (Taupo, New Zealand) Revealed by U–Th and U–Pb Systematics in Zircons

TLDR
The model-age spectra, coupled with zircon-dissolution modelling, highlight contrasts between short-term silicic magma generation at Taupo, by bulk remobilization of crystal mush and assimilation of metasediment and/or silicics plutonic basement rocks, and the longer-term processes of fractionation from crustally contaminated mafic melts as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
Young (<65 ka) explosive silicic volcanism at Taupo volcano, New Zealand, has involved the development and evacuation of several crustal magmatic systems. Up to and including the 26·5 ka 530 km3 Oruanui eruption, magmatic systems were contemporaneous but geographically separated. Subsequently they have been separated in time and have vented from geographically overlapping areas. Single-crystal (secondary ionization mass spectrometry) and multiple-crystal (thermal ionization mass spectrometry) zircon model-age data are presented from nine representative eruption deposits from 45 to 3·5 ka. Zircon yields vary by three orders of magnitude, correlating with the degrees of zircon saturation in the magmas, and influencing the spectra of model ages. Two adjacent magma systems active up to 26·5 ka show wholly contrasting model-age spectra. The smaller system shows a simple unimodal distribution. The larger system, using data from three eruptions, shows bimodal model-age spectra. An older 100 ka peak is interpreted to represent zircons (antecrysts) derived from older silicic mush or plutonic rocks, and a younger peak to represent zircons (phenocrysts) that grew in the magma body immediately prior to eruption. Post-26·5 ka magma batches show contrasting age spectra, consistent with a mixture of antecrysts, phenocrysts and, in two examples, xenocrysts from Quaternary plutonic and Mesozoic–Palaeozoic metasedimentary rocks. The model-age spectra, coupled with zircon-dissolution modelling, highlight contrasts between short-term silicic magma generation at Taupo, by bulk remobilization of crystal mush and assimilation of metasediment and/or silicic plutonic basement rocks, and the longer-term processes of fractionation from crustally contaminated mafic melts. Contrasts between adjacent or successive magma systems are attributed to differences in positions of the source and root zones within contrasting domains in the quartzo-feldspathic (<15 km deep) crust below the volcano.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Zircon growth and recycling during the assembly of large, composite arc plutons

TL;DR: Recently, high-precision U-Pb zircon age dating from the Cretaceous Tuolumne and Mt. Stuart batholiths has shown that the timeframe of pluton assembly was long.
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A Practical Guide to Rock Microstructure

TL;DR: In this article, a glossary of microstructural terms for sedimentary and metamorphic rocks is presented, along with a discussion of the relationship between sedimentary, igneous and deformed rocks.
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Oxygen Isotopes in Mantle and Crustal Magmas as Revealed by Single Crystal Analysis

TL;DR: MacPherson et al. as mentioned in this paper provided a review of several classic examples of silicic and basic magmatism, including Yellowstone and Iceland, that shows isotope zoning and heterogeneity reaching several permil.
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Compositional Zoning of the Bishop Tuff

TL;DR: In this paper, a model of incremental incremental zoning was proposed, where numerous batches of crystal-poor melt were released from a mush zone (many kilometers thick) that floored the accumulating rhyolitic melt-rich body.
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Correlating the end-Triassic mass extinction and flood basalt volcanism at the 100 ka level

TL;DR: In this paper, high-precision U/Pb geochronology from volcanic ashes was used to show that the Triassic-Juras-sic boundary and end-Triassic biological crisis from two independent marine stratigraphic sections correlate with the onset of terrestrial fl ood volcanism in the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province to <150 ka.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Zircon saturation revisited: temperature and composition effects in a variety of crustal magma types

TL;DR: In this article, the saturation behavior of zircon in crustal anatectic melts as a function of both temperature and composition has been studied and a model of Zr solubility given by: In D Zr Zircon/melt = −3.80−[0.85(M−1)]+12900/T where T is the absolute temperature, and M is the cation ratio (Na + K + 2Ca)/(Al · Si).
Journal ArticleDOI

Gradients in silicic magma chambers: Implications for lithospheric magmatism

TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied the effect of pre-emptive and preemptive gradients in T and O 2 in a variety of compositionally zoned ash flow tuffs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Precise U‐Pb ages of Duluth Complex and related mafic intrusions, northeastern Minnesota: Geochronological insights to physical, petrogenetic, paleomagnetic, and tectonomagmatic processes associated with the 1.1 Ga Midcontinent Rift System

TL;DR: In this article, anorthositic and gabbroic intrusives were chosen to represent both the temporal and spatial ranges of plutonic activity that formed the Duluth Complex and related mafic intrusions.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Generation of Granitic Magmas by Intrusion of Basalt into Continental Crust

TL;DR: Herbel et al. as discussed by the authors developed a quantitative theory for the roof melting case and applied it to basalt sills in hot crust, the theory predicts that basalt Sills of thicknesses from 10 to 1500 m require only 1 to 270 y to solidify and would form voluminous overlying layers of convecting silicicic magma.
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