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The hydrous phase equilibria (to 3 kbar) of an andesite and basaltic andesite from western Mexico: constraints on water content and conditions of phenocryst growth

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TLDR
In this paper, high pressure (to 3 kbar), water saturated melting experiments were conducted on an andesite (62 wt% SiO2) and a basaltic andesitic (55 wt%) from western Mexico, showing that the CO2 content was minimal in the fluid phase.
Abstract
We have conducted high pressure (to 3 kbar), water saturated melting experiments on an andesite (62 wt% SiO2) and a basaltic andesite (55 wt% SiO2) from western Mexico. A close comparison between the experimental phase assemblages and their compositions, and the phenocryst assemblages of the lavas, is found in water saturated liquids, suggesting that the CO2 content was minimal in the fluid phase. Thus the historic lavas from Volcan Colima (with phenocrysts of orthopyroxene, augite, plagioclase, and hornblende) were stored at a temperature between 950–975 °C, at a pressure between 700–1500 bars, and with a water content of 3.0–5.0 wt%. A hornblende andesite (spessartite) from Mascota, of nearly identical composition but with only amphibole phenocrysts, had a similar temperature but equilibrated at a minimum of 2000 bars pressure with a dissolved water content of at least 5.5 wt% in the liquid. Experiments on the basaltic andesite show that the most common natural phenocryst assemblages (olivine, ±augite, ±plagioclase) could have precipitated at temperatures from 1000–1150 °C, in liquids with a wide range of dissolved water content (∼2.0–6.0 wt%) and a corresponding pressure range. A lava of the same bulk composition with phenocrysts of hornblende, olivine, plagioclase, and augite is restricted to temperatures below 1000 °C and pressures below 2500 bars, corresponding to <5.5 wt% water in the residual liquid. Although there is some evidence for mixing in the andesites (sporadic olivine phenocrysts), the broad theme of the history of both lava types is that the phenocryst assemblages for both the andesitic magmas and basaltic andesitic magmas are generated from degassing and reequilibration on ascent of initially hydrous parents containing greater than 6 wt% water. Indeed andesitic magmas could be related to a basaltic andesite parent by hornblende-plagioclase fractionation under the same hydrous conditions.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Thermometers and Barometers for Volcanic Systems

TL;DR: A review of existing geothermometers and geobarometers, and a presentation of approximately 30 new models, including a new plagioclase-liquid hygrometer, can be found in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Genesis of Intermediate and Silicic Magmas in Deep Crustal Hot Zones

TL;DR: In this article, a model for the generation of intermediate and silicic igneous rocks is presented, based on experimental data and numerical modeling, which is directed at subduction-related magmatism, but has general applicability to magmas generated in other plate tectonic settings, including continental rift zones.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stability and chemical equilibrium of amphibole in calc-alkaline magmas: an overview, new thermobarometric formulations and application to subduction-related volcanoes

TL;DR: In this article, a rigorous analysis of the physical-chemical, compositional and textural relationships of amphibole stability and the development of new thermobarometric formulations for amphibole-bearing calc-alkaline products of subduction-related systems is presented.

Volatiles in subduction zone magmas : concentration and fluxes based on melt inclusion and volcanic gas data

P. J. Wallace
TL;DR: In this paper, the fluxes of volatiles subducted back into the mantle along subduction zones and returned from the mantle to the surface reservoir via magmatism suggests that there is an approximate balance for structurally bound H2O and Cl.
Journal ArticleDOI

Volatiles in subduction zone magmas: concentrations and fluxes based on melt inclusion and volcanic gas data

TL;DR: In this paper, the fluxes of volatiles subducted back into the mantle along subduction zones and returned from the mantle to the surface reservoir via magmatism suggests that there is an approximate balance for structurally bound H2O and Cl.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Experimental investigations of the role of H2O in calc-alkaline differentiation and subduction zone magmatism

TL;DR: The phase relations of natural aphyric high-alumina basalts and their intrusive equivalents were determined through rock-melting experiments at 2 kb, H2O-saturated with fO2 buffered at NNO.
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The compressibility of silicate liquids containing Fe 2 O 3 and the effect of composition, temperature, oxygen fugacity and pressure on their redox states

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors extended the empirical expression of Sack et al. to allow the calculation of Fe-redox equilibrium in a natural silicate liquid as a function of composition, temperature, fo2 and pressure; a more formal thermodynamic expression is presented in the Appendix.
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Genesis of the calc-alkaline igneous rock suite

TL;DR: In this article, a high pressure experimental study of the partial melting fields of synthetic high-alumina olivine tholeiite and quartz eclogite under dry and wet conditions has been conducted in order to investigate possible origins of the calc-alkaline series from the upper mantle.
Journal ArticleDOI

Role of oxygen pressure in the crystallization and differentiation of basaltic magma

TL;DR: In this paper, two types of crystallization paths in iron oxide systems are illustrated by describing equilibrium crystallization in the fayalite field of the system FeO-Fe 2 O 3 -SiO 2.
Journal ArticleDOI

Melting Relations of Basalt with Equilibrium Water Pressure Less Than Total Pressure

TL;DR: In this paper, a model for the generation of the calcalkaline suite by partial melting of H,O-rich basalts was presented, and the results of the model substantiate the model for partial melting.
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