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Submarine Fernandina : magmatism at the leading edge of the Galapagos hot spot
Authors
Acosta
Alison M. Koleszar
+68 more
Allan
Allegre
Amelung
Chadwick
Chadwick
Christie
Clague
Clague
Cullen
Daniel J. Fornari
Danyushevsky
Dennis J. Geist
Dieterich
Dixon
Feighner
Fialko
Fiske
Fornari
Fornari
Fornari
Fornari
Garcia
Garcia
Garcia
Geist
Geist
Ghiorso
Graham
Green
Gregg
Gripp
Harpp
Hart
Hofmann
Holcomb
Hooft
Johnson
Johnson
Jónsson
Karen S. Harpp
Kurz
Kurz
Lea
Lenat
Lipman
Lipman
Lonsdale
Malahoff
Mark D. Kurz
Marsh
McBirney
Michael R. Perfit
Moore
Moore
Mouginis-Mark
Naumann
Normark
Perfit
Rowland
S. Adam Soule
Simkin
Simkin
Simkin
Smith
Soule
Sun
Toomey
White
Publication date
19 December 2006
Publisher
'American Geophysical Union (AGU)'
Doi
Abstract
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2006. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems 7 (2006): Q12007, doi:10.1029/2006GC001290.New multibeam and side-scan sonar surveys of Fernandina volcano and the geochemistry of lavas provide clues to the structural and magmatic development of Galápagos volcanoes. Submarine Fernandina has three well-developed rift zones, whereas the subaerial edifice has circumferential fissures associated with a large summit caldera and diffuse radial fissures on the lower slopes. Rift zone development is controlled by changes in deviatoric stresses with increasing distance from the caldera. Large lava flows are present on the gently sloping and deep seafloor west of Fernandina. Fernandina's submarine lavas are petrographically more diverse than the subaerial suite and include picrites. Most submarine glasses are similar in composition to aphyric subaerially erupted lavas, however. These rocks are termed the “normal” series and are believed to result from cooling and crystallization in the subcaldera magma system, which buffers the magmas both thermally and chemically. These normal-series magmas are extruded laterally through the flanks of the volcano, where they scavenge and disaggregate olivine-gabbro mush to produce picritic lavas. A suite of lavas recovered from the terminus of the SW submarine rift and terraces to the south comprises evolved basalts and icelandites with MgO = 3.1 to 5.0 wt.%. This “evolved series” is believed to form by fractional crystallization at 3 to 5 kb, involving extensive crystallization of clinopyroxene and titanomagnetite in addition to plagioclase. “High-K” lavas were recovered from the southwest rift and are attributed to hybridization between normal-series basalt and evolved-series magma. The geochemical and structural findings are used to develop an evolutionary model for the construction of the Galápagos Platform and better understand the petrogenesis of the erupted lavas. The earliest stage is represented by the deep-water lava flows, which over time construct a broad submarine platform. The deep-water lavas originate from the subcaldera plumbing system of the adjacent volcano. After construction of the platform, eruptions focus to a point source, building an island with rift zones extending away from the adjacent, buttressing volcanoes. Most rift zone magmas intrude laterally from the subcaldera magma chamber, although a few evolve by crystallization in the upper mantle and deep crust.This work was supported by the National Science Foundation grants OCE0002818 and EAR0207605 (D.G.), OCE0002461 (D.J.F. and M.K.), OCE9811504 (D.J.F. and M.R.P.), and EAR0207425 (K.H.) and WHOI postdoctoral support for Soule
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