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Petrologic determination of ascent rates for the 1995–1997 Soufriere Hills Volcano andesitic magma

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TLDR
The recent eruption of the Soufriere Hills Volcano in Montserrat (July, 1995, to present; October, 1997) has produced a hornblende-bearing, andesitic lava dome.
Abstract
The recent eruption of the Soufriere Hills Volcano in Montserrat (July, 1995, to present; October, 1997) has produced a hornblende-bearing, andesitic lava dome. It is possible to petrologically estimate changes in ascent rates of amphibole-bearing magmas. For certain rates of decompression, a breakdown rim of fine-grained, anhydrous reaction products forms where amphibole is in contact with melt. The thickness of the rim varies with ascent rate. Most of the amphibole phenocrysts in the magma storage region lack breakdown rims. About 10% have 200–400 µm-thick, coarse-grained breakdown rims that are interpreted to be relicts of a past heating event. Study of a time series of new dome andesites showed that ascent rate increased from December, 1995 (∼0.001 m/s), to July, 1996 (∼0.008 m/s), while eruptive style remained extrusive. Ascent rate increased to >0.012 m/s in August, 1996, and the first major explosive eruption occurred on 17–18 September, 1996.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Remobilization of Andesite Magma by Intrusion of Mafic Magma at the Soufriere Hills Volcano, Montserrat, West Indies

TL;DR: The 1995-1999 eruption of the Soufriere Hills volcano, Montserrat, has produced a crystal-rich andesite containing quench as discussed by the authors, which was preceded by a pristine and unaltered to strongly oxidized and pseudomorphed by period of seismic swarms, which began in January 1992.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nonlinear dynamics of lava dome extrusion

Oleg Melnik, +1 more
- 04 Nov 1999 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the effects of crystallization and gas loss by permeable flow are incorporated into a numerical model of conduit flow and lava dome extrusion, which can be explained by the nonlinear effects of gas loss and crystallization in the uppermost few hundred metres of the volcanic conduit.
Journal ArticleDOI

An experimental study of the kinetics of decompression-induced crystallization in silicic melt

TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied the temporal evolution of feldspar crystallization kinetics during isothermal decompression and found that slowly decompressed samples were usually further from chemical equilibrium than rapidly decompressed sample after similar durations below the initial pressure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Magma flow instability and cyclic activity at soufriere hills volcano, montserrat, british west indies

TL;DR: Dome growth at the Soufriere Hills volcano (1996 to 1998) was frequently accompanied by repetitive cycles of earthquakes, ground deformation, degassing, and explosive eruptions, which allowed short-term forecasting of timing, and of eruption style related to explosivity potential.
Journal ArticleDOI

Degassing and crystallization of ascending andesite and dacite

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present two complementary approaches to the study of syn-eruptive, degassing-induced crystallization, including projection of matrix glass compositions onto the well-understood Qz-Ab-Or ternary.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The dynamics of bubble formation and growth in magmas: A review and analysis

TL;DR: In this article, a numerical method has been developed to determine bubble growth rates during volcanic eruptions of basaltic and rhyolitic tephras, and the numerical solutions consider both diffusional and decompressional growth and the effects of magma ascent rates (0-400 cm s−1), magma viscosity (102 to 108 poise), gas solubility, gas content (0.25-5%), and gas diffusivity (10−6 to 10−9 cm2 s− 1) on growth rates.
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Non-explosive silicic volcanism

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that non-explosive eruption of lava appears to result from rapid, sub-surface gas release from magma ascending as a permeable foam.
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Gas content, eruption rate and instabilities of eruption regime in silicic volcanoes

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that very small pressure fluctuations of the order of one bar in the chamber lead to large changes of gas content at the vent, and this decrease acts to increase the fraction of gas lost to the country rock and hence to reduce the gas content of the erupted material.
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Magma ascent rates from amphibole breakdown: An experimental study applied to the 1980–1986 Mount St. Helens eruptions

TL;DR: The amphibole reaction rims in these rocks are a response to water loss from the coexisting melt during an approximately adiabatic ascent from a deep reservoir as mentioned in this paper, which indicates that they all originated from an 8 km deep reservoir at 900°±20°C with XH2O= 0.67 in fluid according to experimental data.
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Permeability development in vesiculating magmas: implications for fragmentation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed that the degree to which magma is fragmented is determined by factors controlling bubble coalescence: magma viscosity, temperature, bubble size distribution, bubble shapes, and time.
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