Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems (Sep 2020)

Evidence for an Active, Transcrustal Magma System in the Last 60 ka and Eruptive Degassing Budget (H2O, CO2, S, F, Cl, Br): The Case of Dominica

  • T. d'Augustin,
  • H. Balcone‐Boissard,
  • G. Boudon,
  • C. Martel,
  • E. Deloule,
  • P. Bürckel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1029/2020GC009050
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 9
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract The Morne Trois Pitons‐Micotrin volcanic complex on the island of Dominica (Lesser Antilles) emitted a series of plinian eruptions between 18 and 9 ka BP. We studied it to constrain magma storage conditions and volatile degassing balances, by comparison with the three previous ignimbrites (~60–24 ka BP). Volatile concentrations in glass inclusions and mineral‐melt thermobarometry indicate storage at ≤200 MPa (~6–8 km) and 860–880°C. The magmas feeding these plinian eruptions were stored at a shallower depth than those that older ignimbrites from the same volcanic complex and stored at ~16 km. Close magma composition and similar halogen ratios, however, suggest a common source for the magmas feeding both the plinian eruptions and the ignimbrites. The large eruptive fluxes of F, Cl, and Br to the atmosphere (up to 1.4–2.8 × 10−1 Mt/km3, 1.5–4.0 Mt/km3, and 2–4 × 10−2 Mt/km3, respectively), estimated by the petrological method, support the potentially important role of volcanic halogens in modifying the chemistry of the atmosphere, though Cl is underestimated here because of buffering in a fluid phase. The behavior of S, potentially partitioned in the same fluid phase, prevents here the calculation of an eruptive outgassing budget.

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