4 research outputs found
Compositional Trends and Eruptive Cycles at Mount St. Helens
The 40,000-year eruptive history of Mount St. Helens reveals an overall compositional trend from rhyodacite to andesite, with basalt at ~1.9 and ~1.6 ka. A cyclic eruption pattern is superimposed on this trend. Cycles comprised a repose interval, when compositional and thermal gradients developed in the underlying magma body, followed by an eruption interval in which progressive tapping of magma beheaded these gradients. Recovery of gradients varied with duration of the ensuing repose period. Eruption sequences follow the pattern: (1) eruptive progression from Plinian eruptions to dome growth accompanied by pyroclastic flows and tephra, followed (in some cases) by lava flows punctuated by pyroclastic outbursts; (2) a mineralogic progression from hydrous Fe-Mg phenocrysts (hb, cm, bi) toward pyroxenes; (3) a magmatic compositional progression from rhyodacite or dacite to andesite. Progressions 1 and 2 stem mainly from volatile gradients in the magma reservoir whereas progression 3 (and to some extent 2) reflects gradients of melt composition and crystal content. Three eruption cycles within the last 4,000 years follow this pattern. Earlier cycles are probable but only dimly perceived, mainly from the partial record of tephras and pyroclastic flows
Alternate origins of the Coast Range Ophiolite (California); introduction and implications
Correctly interpreting the tectonic
evolution of the California continental
margin requires understanding the origin
of the Jurassic Coast Range Ophiolite,
which represents a fragment of
mafic-to-ultramafic crust of oceanic
character lying depositionally beneath
the western flank of the Great Valley
forearc basin in fault contact with the
Franciscan subduction complex of the
California Coast Ranges. Three contrasting
hypotheses for genesis of the
ophiolite as seafloor are each based on
internally consistent logic within the
framework of plate tectonics, but are
mutually exclusive and lead to strikingly
different interpretations of regional
tectonic relations, even though each
assumes that the Sierra Nevada batholith
to the east represents the eroded roots of
a magmatic arc linked to subduction
along the Mesozoic continental margin.
To encourage the further work or analysis
needed to develop a definitive interpretation,
summary arguments for each
hypothesis of Coast Range Ophiolite
genesis in mid- to late Jurassic time
are presented in parallel: (1) backarc
spreading behind an east-facing intraoceanic
island arc that then collided and
amalgamated with the Sierran continental-
margin arc; (2) paleoequatorial midocean
spreading to form oceanic lithosphere
that was then drawn northward
toward a subduction zone in front of
the Sierran continental-margin arc; and
(3) forearc spreading within the forearc
region of the Sierran continental-margin
arc in response to transtensional deformation
during slab rollback