Measurements of 238U-230Th-226Ra disequilibria, Sr-Nd-Hf isotopes and major-trace elements have been conducted for lavas erupted in the last quarter-millennium at Hekla volcano, Iceland. The volcanic rocks range from basalt to dacite. Most of the lavas (excluding dactic samples) display limited compositional variation in radiogenic Sr-Nd-Pb-Hf isotopes (87Sr/86Sr = 0.70319-0.70322; 143Nd/144Nd = 0.51302-0.51305; 206Pb/204Pb = 19.04-19.06; 207Pb/204Pb = 15.53-15.54; 208Pb/204Pb = 38.61-38.65; 176Hf/177Hf = 0.28311-0.28312). All the samples possess (230Th/238U) disequilibrium with 230Th excesses, and they show systematic variation in (230Th/232Th) ratios. The highest 226Ra excesses occur in the basalt and most differentiated andesite lavas, while some basaltic-andesite lavas have (226Ra/230Th) ratio that are close to equilibrium. The 238U-230Th-226Ra disequilibria variations cannot be produced by simple closed-system fractional crystallization with radioactive decay of 230Th and 226Ra in a magma chamber. A closed-system fractional crystallization model and assimilation and fractional crystallization (AFC) model indicate that the least differentiated basaltic andesites were derived from basalt by fractional crystallization with a differentiation age of ~24 ± 11 kyr, whereas the andesites were formed by assimilation of crustal materials and fractionation of the basaltic-andesites within 2 kyr. Apatite is inferred to play a key role in fractionating the parent-daughter nuclides in 230Th-238U and 226Ra-230Th to make the observed variations. Our proposed model is that several batches of basaltic-andesite magmas that formed by fractional crystallization of a basaltic melt from a deeper reservoir, were periodically injected into the shallow crust to form individual magma pockets, and subsequently modifying the original magma compositions via simultaneous assimilation and fractional crystallization. The assimilant is the dacitic melt, which formed by partial melting of the crust.
We therefore, suggested an alternative model that the existence of several isolated lenses of magma bodies in a shallow crustal level, which were episodically intruded from a deeper (near-Moho) magma reservoir and subsequently underwent simultaneous differentiation through AFC.
The other radiogenic isotopes (Sr–Nd–Hf–Pb) are less sensitive to the magma differentiation events in Hekla lavas when compared to 238U–230Th–226Ra data. This makes U-series disequilibria an excellent geochemical tracer for magmatic evolution beneath active volcanoes.
@article{20150909131402-449121,
author = "Takele A. Chekol and Katsura Kobayashi and Yokoyama, Tetsuya and Sakaguchi, Chie and Nakamura, Eizo",
title = "Timescales of magma differentiation from basalt to andesite beneath Hekla Volcano, Iceland: constraints from U-series disequilibria in lavas from the last quarter-millennium flows",
journal = "Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta",
year = "2011",
number = "1",
volume = "75",
pages = "256-283",
note = "Chekol, Takele A and Kobayashi, Katsura and Yokoyama, Tetsuya and Sakaguchi, Chie and Nakamura, Eizo",
doi = "10.1016/j.gca.2010.10.001",
}
caption | ID | rowname | stone | ||
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Table 1: Major elements, trace elements and Sr, Nd, Pb, Hf, U, Th and Ra isotopic data of Hekla samples pub | 20151201122051-845459 | major-trace-isotope (Chekol et al., 2011) | 50 | ||