Formation of the El Laco magmatic magnetite deposits by Fe-Si melt immiscibility and bubbly suspension flow along volcano tectonic faults

The origin of Kiruna-type magnetite-apatite deposits, which are thought to form by magmatic and/or hydrothermal processes, has recently come under renewed scrutiny. Geological and geochemical studies of volcanic-hosted magnetite deposits that include magnetite lava flows and ash layers at El Laco, a...

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Main Authors: Keller, Tobias, Hanchar, John, Tornos, Fernando, Suckale, Jenny
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Authorea 2019
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Online Access:https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/488352/
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spelling ftsouthampton:oai:eprints.soton.ac.uk:488352 2024-04-21T08:06:33+00:00 Formation of the El Laco magmatic magnetite deposits by Fe-Si melt immiscibility and bubbly suspension flow along volcano tectonic faults Keller, Tobias Hanchar, John Tornos, Fernando Suckale, Jenny 2019-01-07 https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/488352/ English eng Authorea [Unknown type: UNSPECIFIED] NonPeerReviewed 2019 ftsouthampton 2024-03-27T15:03:46Z The origin of Kiruna-type magnetite-apatite deposits, which are thought to form by magmatic and/or hydrothermal processes, has recently come under renewed scrutiny. Geological and geochemical studies of volcanic-hosted magnetite deposits that include magnetite lava flows and ash layers at El Laco, a volcano in the Central Volcanic Zone, northern Chile, suggest a formation by eruptive emplacement of an iron oxide-rich melt. The generation of such exotic high density, low viscosity melts by dissociation from an andesitic host magma contaminated by shallow crustal sediments has only recently been shown experimentally. The dynamics of volcanic emplacement have remained enigmatic because the high density of iron-rich melts seems to negate their eruption potential. Yet, observations of ubiquitous vesiculation, degassing structures, and steam-heated alteration provide important clues that volatiles had a pivotal role in the volcanic emplacement. Here, we posit a scenario in which an iron-rich immiscible liquid gravitationally separates from its andesitic parent magma in a shallow magma reservoir and subsequently rises as a bubbly suspension along volcano-tectonic faults extending to the flanks of the edifice. We test this hypothesis through numerical models that capture both the deformation of the volcanic edifice as well as the melt transport within. Preliminary results indicate that separation of a low-viscosity, iron- and volatile-rich melt from a silicic magma within a reasonable time is possible only if an interconnected melt drainage networks forms at the granular scale. Results further suggest that magma reservoir deflation and/or minor local extension combined with the topographic load of the edifice may explain normal faults connecting the magma reservoir with magnetite flow locations on the volcano flanks. Finally, our models show that hydrostatically driven flow of iron-rich melts into these faults at depth may trigger volatile exsolution and bubble expansion to provide sufficient driving force for an ... Text Kiruna University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton
institution Open Polar
collection University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton
op_collection_id ftsouthampton
language English
description The origin of Kiruna-type magnetite-apatite deposits, which are thought to form by magmatic and/or hydrothermal processes, has recently come under renewed scrutiny. Geological and geochemical studies of volcanic-hosted magnetite deposits that include magnetite lava flows and ash layers at El Laco, a volcano in the Central Volcanic Zone, northern Chile, suggest a formation by eruptive emplacement of an iron oxide-rich melt. The generation of such exotic high density, low viscosity melts by dissociation from an andesitic host magma contaminated by shallow crustal sediments has only recently been shown experimentally. The dynamics of volcanic emplacement have remained enigmatic because the high density of iron-rich melts seems to negate their eruption potential. Yet, observations of ubiquitous vesiculation, degassing structures, and steam-heated alteration provide important clues that volatiles had a pivotal role in the volcanic emplacement. Here, we posit a scenario in which an iron-rich immiscible liquid gravitationally separates from its andesitic parent magma in a shallow magma reservoir and subsequently rises as a bubbly suspension along volcano-tectonic faults extending to the flanks of the edifice. We test this hypothesis through numerical models that capture both the deformation of the volcanic edifice as well as the melt transport within. Preliminary results indicate that separation of a low-viscosity, iron- and volatile-rich melt from a silicic magma within a reasonable time is possible only if an interconnected melt drainage networks forms at the granular scale. Results further suggest that magma reservoir deflation and/or minor local extension combined with the topographic load of the edifice may explain normal faults connecting the magma reservoir with magnetite flow locations on the volcano flanks. Finally, our models show that hydrostatically driven flow of iron-rich melts into these faults at depth may trigger volatile exsolution and bubble expansion to provide sufficient driving force for an ...
format Text
author Keller, Tobias
Hanchar, John
Tornos, Fernando
Suckale, Jenny
spellingShingle Keller, Tobias
Hanchar, John
Tornos, Fernando
Suckale, Jenny
Formation of the El Laco magmatic magnetite deposits by Fe-Si melt immiscibility and bubbly suspension flow along volcano tectonic faults
author_facet Keller, Tobias
Hanchar, John
Tornos, Fernando
Suckale, Jenny
author_sort Keller, Tobias
title Formation of the El Laco magmatic magnetite deposits by Fe-Si melt immiscibility and bubbly suspension flow along volcano tectonic faults
title_short Formation of the El Laco magmatic magnetite deposits by Fe-Si melt immiscibility and bubbly suspension flow along volcano tectonic faults
title_full Formation of the El Laco magmatic magnetite deposits by Fe-Si melt immiscibility and bubbly suspension flow along volcano tectonic faults
title_fullStr Formation of the El Laco magmatic magnetite deposits by Fe-Si melt immiscibility and bubbly suspension flow along volcano tectonic faults
title_full_unstemmed Formation of the El Laco magmatic magnetite deposits by Fe-Si melt immiscibility and bubbly suspension flow along volcano tectonic faults
title_sort formation of the el laco magmatic magnetite deposits by fe-si melt immiscibility and bubbly suspension flow along volcano tectonic faults
publisher Authorea
publishDate 2019
url https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/488352/
genre Kiruna
genre_facet Kiruna
op_relation [Unknown type: UNSPECIFIED]
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