Lithofacies Architecture and Construction of Volcanoes Erupted in Englacial Lakes: Icefall Nunatak, Mount Murphy, Eastern Marie Byrd Land, Antarctica

Mount Murphy is a large Miocene shield volcano flanked by several small basaltic satellite centres that were erupted beneath a thick (> 200 m) ice sheet. Three empirical models illustrating the hydraulic evolution of glacio-volcanic systems are deduced from glacier physics, with distinctly differ...

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Main Author: Smellie, J. L.
Other Authors: White, J.D.L., Riggs, N.R.
Format: Book Part
Language:unknown
Published: Blackwell 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:http://nora.nerc.ac.uk/id/eprint/20288/
https://doi.org/10.1002/9781444304251.ch2
id ftnerc:oai:nora.nerc.ac.uk:20288
record_format openpolar
spelling ftnerc:oai:nora.nerc.ac.uk:20288 2023-12-24T10:09:32+01:00 Lithofacies Architecture and Construction of Volcanoes Erupted in Englacial Lakes: Icefall Nunatak, Mount Murphy, Eastern Marie Byrd Land, Antarctica Smellie, J. L. White, J.D.L. Riggs, N.R. 2001 http://nora.nerc.ac.uk/id/eprint/20288/ https://doi.org/10.1002/9781444304251.ch2 unknown Blackwell Smellie, J. L. 2001 Lithofacies Architecture and Construction of Volcanoes Erupted in Englacial Lakes: Icefall Nunatak, Mount Murphy, Eastern Marie Byrd Land, Antarctica. In: White, J.D.L.; Riggs, N.R., (eds.) Volcaniclastic Sedimentation in Lacustrine Settings. Oxford, Blackwell, 9-34. (International Association of Sedimentologists special publication, 30). Publication - Book Section NonPeerReviewed 2001 ftnerc https://doi.org/10.1002/9781444304251.ch2 2023-11-24T00:03:08Z Mount Murphy is a large Miocene shield volcano flanked by several small basaltic satellite centres that were erupted beneath a thick (> 200 m) ice sheet. Three empirical models illustrating the hydraulic evolution of glacio-volcanic systems are deduced from glacier physics, with distinctly different implications in each case for the resultant lithofacies architecture. Glacier hydraulic considerations and facies analysis are used to describe the evolution of one of the satellite centres (Icefall Nunatak). The nunatak was constructed from several vents during three main stages. Each stage demonstrates different aspects of englacial volcano construction, mainly in a flooded vault or lacustrine setting. An initial mainly effusive phase was dominated by lava and cogenetic joint-block breccia, and eruption was probably confined mainly within an englacial vault or lake (stage I). Renewed activity, at a different vent and beneath a re-established ice sheet (stage II), began with coarse sediments flushed away subglacially. A subaqueous tuff cone was then constructed in an englacial lake, from explosively erupted coarse glassy tephra probably produced mainly during sustained eruptions and distributed by high-density turbidity currents. Fine detritus is common only in the basal tuff cone unit, possibly as a result of lower, denser (largely subaqueous?) eruption columns. A spectacular slope failure is represented by numerous large blocks, which were displaced to low elevations on extensively fractured tuff cone flanks, and the failure event may have initiated zones of high pore-water discharge. Stage II culminated with two phases of lava delta progradation, indicating that the volcanic edifice ultimately penetrated the entire ice-sheet thickness and that the vent became emergent. Stage III commenced with lava effusion, probably through a thin re-formed cover of permeable snow and firn. A small cinder cone was also constructed and was partially palagonitized because of its structural position on top of a water-saturated ... Book Part Antarc* Antarctica Ice Sheet Marie Byrd Land Natural Environment Research Council: NERC Open Research Archive Byrd Marie Byrd Land ENVELOPE(-130.000,-130.000,-78.000,-78.000) Mount Murphy ENVELOPE(-110.733,-110.733,-75.333,-75.333) 7 34 Oxford, UK
institution Open Polar
collection Natural Environment Research Council: NERC Open Research Archive
op_collection_id ftnerc
language unknown
description Mount Murphy is a large Miocene shield volcano flanked by several small basaltic satellite centres that were erupted beneath a thick (> 200 m) ice sheet. Three empirical models illustrating the hydraulic evolution of glacio-volcanic systems are deduced from glacier physics, with distinctly different implications in each case for the resultant lithofacies architecture. Glacier hydraulic considerations and facies analysis are used to describe the evolution of one of the satellite centres (Icefall Nunatak). The nunatak was constructed from several vents during three main stages. Each stage demonstrates different aspects of englacial volcano construction, mainly in a flooded vault or lacustrine setting. An initial mainly effusive phase was dominated by lava and cogenetic joint-block breccia, and eruption was probably confined mainly within an englacial vault or lake (stage I). Renewed activity, at a different vent and beneath a re-established ice sheet (stage II), began with coarse sediments flushed away subglacially. A subaqueous tuff cone was then constructed in an englacial lake, from explosively erupted coarse glassy tephra probably produced mainly during sustained eruptions and distributed by high-density turbidity currents. Fine detritus is common only in the basal tuff cone unit, possibly as a result of lower, denser (largely subaqueous?) eruption columns. A spectacular slope failure is represented by numerous large blocks, which were displaced to low elevations on extensively fractured tuff cone flanks, and the failure event may have initiated zones of high pore-water discharge. Stage II culminated with two phases of lava delta progradation, indicating that the volcanic edifice ultimately penetrated the entire ice-sheet thickness and that the vent became emergent. Stage III commenced with lava effusion, probably through a thin re-formed cover of permeable snow and firn. A small cinder cone was also constructed and was partially palagonitized because of its structural position on top of a water-saturated ...
author2 White, J.D.L.
Riggs, N.R.
format Book Part
author Smellie, J. L.
spellingShingle Smellie, J. L.
Lithofacies Architecture and Construction of Volcanoes Erupted in Englacial Lakes: Icefall Nunatak, Mount Murphy, Eastern Marie Byrd Land, Antarctica
author_facet Smellie, J. L.
author_sort Smellie, J. L.
title Lithofacies Architecture and Construction of Volcanoes Erupted in Englacial Lakes: Icefall Nunatak, Mount Murphy, Eastern Marie Byrd Land, Antarctica
title_short Lithofacies Architecture and Construction of Volcanoes Erupted in Englacial Lakes: Icefall Nunatak, Mount Murphy, Eastern Marie Byrd Land, Antarctica
title_full Lithofacies Architecture and Construction of Volcanoes Erupted in Englacial Lakes: Icefall Nunatak, Mount Murphy, Eastern Marie Byrd Land, Antarctica
title_fullStr Lithofacies Architecture and Construction of Volcanoes Erupted in Englacial Lakes: Icefall Nunatak, Mount Murphy, Eastern Marie Byrd Land, Antarctica
title_full_unstemmed Lithofacies Architecture and Construction of Volcanoes Erupted in Englacial Lakes: Icefall Nunatak, Mount Murphy, Eastern Marie Byrd Land, Antarctica
title_sort lithofacies architecture and construction of volcanoes erupted in englacial lakes: icefall nunatak, mount murphy, eastern marie byrd land, antarctica
publisher Blackwell
publishDate 2001
url http://nora.nerc.ac.uk/id/eprint/20288/
https://doi.org/10.1002/9781444304251.ch2
long_lat ENVELOPE(-130.000,-130.000,-78.000,-78.000)
ENVELOPE(-110.733,-110.733,-75.333,-75.333)
geographic Byrd
Marie Byrd Land
Mount Murphy
geographic_facet Byrd
Marie Byrd Land
Mount Murphy
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
Ice Sheet
Marie Byrd Land
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
Ice Sheet
Marie Byrd Land
op_relation Smellie, J. L. 2001 Lithofacies Architecture and Construction of Volcanoes Erupted in Englacial Lakes: Icefall Nunatak, Mount Murphy, Eastern Marie Byrd Land, Antarctica. In: White, J.D.L.; Riggs, N.R., (eds.) Volcaniclastic Sedimentation in Lacustrine Settings. Oxford, Blackwell, 9-34. (International Association of Sedimentologists special publication, 30).
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1002/9781444304251.ch2
container_start_page 7
op_container_end_page 34
op_publisher_place Oxford, UK
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