Down the Crater: Where Magmas are Stored and Why They Erupt
撞击坑
地质学
天体生物学
物理
作者
Keith Putirka
出处
期刊:Elements [Mineralogical Society of America] 日期:2017-02-01卷期号:13 (1): 11-16被引量:63
标识
DOI:10.2113/gselements.13.1.11
摘要
Magmas are erupted from a wide range of depths. Olivine compositions, for example, indicate magma storage in the lower crust and upper mantle, while clinopyroxene and amphibole record middle to upper crust storage. Pre-eruptive magmas also often cool by 100–300 °C, frequently at middle–upper crust depths, indicating clogged, ephemeral volcanic pathways. These coolings imply that mafic recharge is not a sufficient cause for eruption and that crystallization-induced vapor saturation is a more proximal eruption trigger. But an improved understanding of eruption mechanisms require precise identifications of what are herein termed “ultimate”, “proximal,” and “immediate” causes of eruption.