Volatiles and the tempo of flood basalt magmatism

Individual flood basalt lavas often exceed 103 km3 in volume, and many such lavas erupt during emplacement of flood basalt provinces. The large volume of individual flood basalt lavas implies correspondingly large magma reservoirs within or at the base of the crust. To erupt, some fraction of this m...

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Main Authors: Black, BA, Manga, M
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7mm1q3v1
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spelling ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org/ark:/13030/qt7mm1q3v1 2023-05-15T17:52:11+02:00 Volatiles and the tempo of flood basalt magmatism Black, BA Manga, M 2017-01-15 application/pdf https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7mm1q3v1 unknown eScholarship, University of California qt7mm1q3v1 https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7mm1q3v1 public flood basalts volcanology eruption dynamics Siberian Traps magmatic processes volatiles Geochemistry & Geophysics Physical Sciences Earth Sciences article 2017 ftcdlib 2021-11-08T18:16:31Z Individual flood basalt lavas often exceed 103 km3 in volume, and many such lavas erupt during emplacement of flood basalt provinces. The large volume of individual flood basalt lavas implies correspondingly large magma reservoirs within or at the base of the crust. To erupt, some fraction of this magma must become buoyant and overpressure must be sufficient to encourage failure and dike propagation. The overpressure associated with a new injection of magma is inversely proportional to the total reservoir volume, and as a large magma body heats the surrounding rocks thermally activated creep will relax isotropic overpressure more rapidly. Here, we examine the viability of buoyancy overpressure as a trigger for continental flood basalt eruptions. We employ a new one-dimensional model that combines volatile exsolution, bubble growth and rise, assimilation, and permeable fluid escape from Moho-depth and crustal chambers. We investigate the temporal evolution of degassing and the eruptibility of magmas using the Siberian Traps flood basalts as a test case. We suggest that the volatile inventory set during mantle melting and redistributed via bubble motion controls ascent of magma into and through the crust, thereby regulating the tempo of flood basalt magmatism. Volatile-rich melts from low degrees of partial melting of the mantle are buoyant and erupt to the surface with little staging or crustal interaction. Melts with moderate volatile budgets accumulate in large, mostly molten magma chambers at the Moho or in the lower crust. These large magma bodies may remain buoyant and poised to erupt—triggered by volatile-rich recharge or external stresses—for ∼106 yr. If and when such chambers fail, enormous volumes of magma can ascend into the upper crust, staging at shallow levels and initiating substantial assimilation that contributes to pulses of large-volume flood basalt eruption. Our model further predicts that the Siberian Traps may have released 1019–1020 g of CO2 during a number of brief (∼104 yr) pulses, providing a plausible trigger for warming and ocean acidification during the end-Permian mass extinction. The assimilation of carbon-rich crustal rocks strongly enhances both flood basalt eruptibility and CO2 release, and the tempo of eruptions influences the environmental effects of CO2, SO2, and halogen degassing. The eruptive dynamics of flood basalts are thus inextricably linked with their environmental consequences. Article in Journal/Newspaper Ocean acidification University of California: eScholarship
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language unknown
topic flood basalts
volcanology
eruption dynamics
Siberian Traps
magmatic processes
volatiles
Geochemistry & Geophysics
Physical Sciences
Earth Sciences
spellingShingle flood basalts
volcanology
eruption dynamics
Siberian Traps
magmatic processes
volatiles
Geochemistry & Geophysics
Physical Sciences
Earth Sciences
Black, BA
Manga, M
Volatiles and the tempo of flood basalt magmatism
topic_facet flood basalts
volcanology
eruption dynamics
Siberian Traps
magmatic processes
volatiles
Geochemistry & Geophysics
Physical Sciences
Earth Sciences
description Individual flood basalt lavas often exceed 103 km3 in volume, and many such lavas erupt during emplacement of flood basalt provinces. The large volume of individual flood basalt lavas implies correspondingly large magma reservoirs within or at the base of the crust. To erupt, some fraction of this magma must become buoyant and overpressure must be sufficient to encourage failure and dike propagation. The overpressure associated with a new injection of magma is inversely proportional to the total reservoir volume, and as a large magma body heats the surrounding rocks thermally activated creep will relax isotropic overpressure more rapidly. Here, we examine the viability of buoyancy overpressure as a trigger for continental flood basalt eruptions. We employ a new one-dimensional model that combines volatile exsolution, bubble growth and rise, assimilation, and permeable fluid escape from Moho-depth and crustal chambers. We investigate the temporal evolution of degassing and the eruptibility of magmas using the Siberian Traps flood basalts as a test case. We suggest that the volatile inventory set during mantle melting and redistributed via bubble motion controls ascent of magma into and through the crust, thereby regulating the tempo of flood basalt magmatism. Volatile-rich melts from low degrees of partial melting of the mantle are buoyant and erupt to the surface with little staging or crustal interaction. Melts with moderate volatile budgets accumulate in large, mostly molten magma chambers at the Moho or in the lower crust. These large magma bodies may remain buoyant and poised to erupt—triggered by volatile-rich recharge or external stresses—for ∼106 yr. If and when such chambers fail, enormous volumes of magma can ascend into the upper crust, staging at shallow levels and initiating substantial assimilation that contributes to pulses of large-volume flood basalt eruption. Our model further predicts that the Siberian Traps may have released 1019–1020 g of CO2 during a number of brief (∼104 yr) pulses, providing a plausible trigger for warming and ocean acidification during the end-Permian mass extinction. The assimilation of carbon-rich crustal rocks strongly enhances both flood basalt eruptibility and CO2 release, and the tempo of eruptions influences the environmental effects of CO2, SO2, and halogen degassing. The eruptive dynamics of flood basalts are thus inextricably linked with their environmental consequences.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Black, BA
Manga, M
author_facet Black, BA
Manga, M
author_sort Black, BA
title Volatiles and the tempo of flood basalt magmatism
title_short Volatiles and the tempo of flood basalt magmatism
title_full Volatiles and the tempo of flood basalt magmatism
title_fullStr Volatiles and the tempo of flood basalt magmatism
title_full_unstemmed Volatiles and the tempo of flood basalt magmatism
title_sort volatiles and the tempo of flood basalt magmatism
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2017
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7mm1q3v1
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_relation qt7mm1q3v1
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7mm1q3v1
op_rights public
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