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The petrogenesis of sodic island arc magmas at Savo volcano, Solomon Islands

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posted on 2012-10-24, 09:23 authored by Daniel J. Smith, MG Petterson, AD Saunders, GRT Jenkin, J Naden, JM Cook, IL Millar, T Toba
Savo, Solomon Islands, is a historically active volcano dominated by sodic, alkaline lavas, and pyroclastic rocks with up to 7.5 wt% Na2O, and high Sr, arc-like trace element chemistry. The suite is dominated by mugearites (plagioclase–clinopyroxene–magnetite ± amphibole ± olivine) and trachytes (plagioclase–amphibole–magnetite ± biotite). The presence of hydrous minerals (amphibole, biotite) indicates relatively wet magmas. In such melts, plagioclase is relatively unstable relative to iron oxides and ferromagnesian silicates; it is the latter minerals (particularly hornblende) that dominate cumulate nodules at Savo and drive the chemical differentiation of the suite, with a limited role for plagioclase. This is potentially occurring in a crustal “hot zone”, with major chemical differentiation occurring at depth. Batches of magma ascend periodically, where they are subject to decompression, water saturation and further cooling, resulting in closed-system crystallisation of plagioclase, and ultimately the production of sodic, crystal and feldspar-rich, high-Sr rocks. The sodic and hydrous nature of the parental magmas is interpreted to be the result of partial melting of metasomatised mantle, but radiogenic isotope data (Pb, Sr, Nd) cannot uniquely identify the source of the metasomatic agent.

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Citation

CONTRIBUTIONS TO MINERALOGY AND PETROLOGY, 2009, 158 (6), pp. 785-801

Published in

CONTRIBUTIONS TO MINERALOGY AND PETROLOGY

Publisher

Springer Verlag

issn

0010-7999

Copyright date

1007

Available date

2012-10-24

Publisher version

http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00410-009-0410-9

Language

en

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