Volcanica (May 2020)

Deep and disturbed: conditions for formation and eruption of a mingled rhyolite at Ascension Island, south Atlantic

  • Katy Jane Chamberlain,
  • Jenni Barclay,
  • Katie Preece,
  • Richard Brown,
  • Iona McIntosh,
  • EIMF

DOI
https://doi.org/10.30909/vol.03.01.139153
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 1
pp. 139 – 153

Abstract

Read online

The generation of felsic melts (through open or closed system processes) within ocean island volcanoes has been a key area of study since their identification. At Ascension Island in the south Atlantic, explosively erupted felsic melts have, to date, demonstrated a marked absence of signs of magma mixing and crustal assimilation. Here we present the first observations of a fall deposit from Ascension Island recording both macro- and micro-scale evidence for magma mingling. Geochemical analyses of mineral and glass phases, coupled with volatile concentrations of melt inclusions highlight the role of lower-crustal partial melting to produce rhyolitic magmas. Glass textures and the lack of zoning in major mineral phases indicate that mingling with a mafic melt occurred shortly prior to eruption. These inferences of a deep rhyolite production zone, coupled with rapid ascent rates highlight the challenges in forecasting a similar style of eruption at Ascension Island in the future.

Keywords