Bimodal volcanism at the Katla subglacial caldera, Iceland: insight into the geochemistry and petrogenesis of rhyolitic magmas

The Katla subglacial caldera is one of the most active and hazardous volcanic centres in Iceland as revealed by its historical volcanic activity and recent seismic unrest and magma accumulation. A petrologic and geochemical study was carried out on a suite of mid-Pleistocene to Recent lavas and pyro...

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Published in:Bulletin of Volcanology
Main Authors: Lacasse, C., Sigurdsson, H., Carey, S. N., Johannesson, H., Thomas, L. E., Rogers, N. W.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:https://oro.open.ac.uk/9040/
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spelling ftopenunivgb:oai:oro.open.ac.uk:9040 2024-06-23T07:53:57+00:00 Bimodal volcanism at the Katla subglacial caldera, Iceland: insight into the geochemistry and petrogenesis of rhyolitic magmas Lacasse, C. Sigurdsson, H. Carey, S. N. Johannesson, H. Thomas, L. E. Rogers, N. W. 2006-02 https://oro.open.ac.uk/9040/ unknown Lacasse, C.; Sigurdsson, H.; Carey, S. N.; Johannesson, H.; Thomas, L. E. <https://oro.open.ac.uk/view/person/let4.html> and Rogers, N. W. <https://oro.open.ac.uk/view/person/nwr2.html> (2006). Bimodal volcanism at the Katla subglacial caldera, Iceland: insight into the geochemistry and petrogenesis of rhyolitic magmas. Bulletin of Volcanology, 69(4) pp. 373–399. Journal Item PeerReviewed 2006 ftopenunivgb 2024-06-05T00:39:32Z The Katla subglacial caldera is one of the most active and hazardous volcanic centres in Iceland as revealed by its historical volcanic activity and recent seismic unrest and magma accumulation. A petrologic and geochemical study was carried out on a suite of mid-Pleistocene to Recent lavas and pyroclastic rocks originated from the caldera. The whole series is characterised by a bimodal composition, including Fe-Ti transitional alkali basalts and mildly alkalic rhyolites. Variations in trace-element composition amongst the basalts and rhyolites show that their chemical differentiation was mainly controlled by fractional crystallisation and possible assimilation. The petrology and chemistry of the few intermediate extrusive rocks show that they were derived from magma mingling or hybridisation. The absence of extrusive rocks of true intermediate magmatic composition and the occurrence of amphibole-bearing felsic xenoliths support the hypothesis of partial melting of the hydrated basalt crust as the main process leading to the generation of rhyolites. The 143Nd/144Nd and 87Sr/86Sr values of Katla volcanic rocks fit the general isotopic array defined by late Quaternary to Recent lavas from Iceland. A few rock specimens are distinguished by low 143Nd/144Nd values suggesting assimilation and mixing of much older crustal material. Despite their similar whole-rock chemical compositions, the postglacial rhyolitic extrusives differ from the felsic xenoliths by their glass composition and the absence of amphibole. This, together with the general chemical trend of volcanic glasses, indicates that the postglacial rhyolitic extrusives were probably derived by a process involving late reheating and partial melting of crustal material by intrusion of basaltic magmas. Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland Katla The Open University: Open Research Online (ORO) Katla ENVELOPE(-19.062,-19.062,63.631,63.631) Bulletin of Volcanology 69 4 373 399
institution Open Polar
collection The Open University: Open Research Online (ORO)
op_collection_id ftopenunivgb
language unknown
description The Katla subglacial caldera is one of the most active and hazardous volcanic centres in Iceland as revealed by its historical volcanic activity and recent seismic unrest and magma accumulation. A petrologic and geochemical study was carried out on a suite of mid-Pleistocene to Recent lavas and pyroclastic rocks originated from the caldera. The whole series is characterised by a bimodal composition, including Fe-Ti transitional alkali basalts and mildly alkalic rhyolites. Variations in trace-element composition amongst the basalts and rhyolites show that their chemical differentiation was mainly controlled by fractional crystallisation and possible assimilation. The petrology and chemistry of the few intermediate extrusive rocks show that they were derived from magma mingling or hybridisation. The absence of extrusive rocks of true intermediate magmatic composition and the occurrence of amphibole-bearing felsic xenoliths support the hypothesis of partial melting of the hydrated basalt crust as the main process leading to the generation of rhyolites. The 143Nd/144Nd and 87Sr/86Sr values of Katla volcanic rocks fit the general isotopic array defined by late Quaternary to Recent lavas from Iceland. A few rock specimens are distinguished by low 143Nd/144Nd values suggesting assimilation and mixing of much older crustal material. Despite their similar whole-rock chemical compositions, the postglacial rhyolitic extrusives differ from the felsic xenoliths by their glass composition and the absence of amphibole. This, together with the general chemical trend of volcanic glasses, indicates that the postglacial rhyolitic extrusives were probably derived by a process involving late reheating and partial melting of crustal material by intrusion of basaltic magmas.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Lacasse, C.
Sigurdsson, H.
Carey, S. N.
Johannesson, H.
Thomas, L. E.
Rogers, N. W.
spellingShingle Lacasse, C.
Sigurdsson, H.
Carey, S. N.
Johannesson, H.
Thomas, L. E.
Rogers, N. W.
Bimodal volcanism at the Katla subglacial caldera, Iceland: insight into the geochemistry and petrogenesis of rhyolitic magmas
author_facet Lacasse, C.
Sigurdsson, H.
Carey, S. N.
Johannesson, H.
Thomas, L. E.
Rogers, N. W.
author_sort Lacasse, C.
title Bimodal volcanism at the Katla subglacial caldera, Iceland: insight into the geochemistry and petrogenesis of rhyolitic magmas
title_short Bimodal volcanism at the Katla subglacial caldera, Iceland: insight into the geochemistry and petrogenesis of rhyolitic magmas
title_full Bimodal volcanism at the Katla subglacial caldera, Iceland: insight into the geochemistry and petrogenesis of rhyolitic magmas
title_fullStr Bimodal volcanism at the Katla subglacial caldera, Iceland: insight into the geochemistry and petrogenesis of rhyolitic magmas
title_full_unstemmed Bimodal volcanism at the Katla subglacial caldera, Iceland: insight into the geochemistry and petrogenesis of rhyolitic magmas
title_sort bimodal volcanism at the katla subglacial caldera, iceland: insight into the geochemistry and petrogenesis of rhyolitic magmas
publishDate 2006
url https://oro.open.ac.uk/9040/
long_lat ENVELOPE(-19.062,-19.062,63.631,63.631)
geographic Katla
geographic_facet Katla
genre Iceland
Katla
genre_facet Iceland
Katla
op_relation Lacasse, C.; Sigurdsson, H.; Carey, S. N.; Johannesson, H.; Thomas, L. E. <https://oro.open.ac.uk/view/person/let4.html> and Rogers, N. W. <https://oro.open.ac.uk/view/person/nwr2.html> (2006). Bimodal volcanism at the Katla subglacial caldera, Iceland: insight into the geochemistry and petrogenesis of rhyolitic magmas. Bulletin of Volcanology, 69(4) pp. 373–399.
container_title Bulletin of Volcanology
container_volume 69
container_issue 4
container_start_page 373
op_container_end_page 399
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