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Petrology and geochemistry of lava and ash erupted from Volcán Colima, Mexico, during 1998–2005
Authors:Ivan P Savov  James F Luhr  Carlos Navarro-Ochoa
Institution:aSchool of Earth and Environment, The University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, United Kingdom;bDepartment of Mineral Sciences, National Museum of Natural Sciences, Smithsonian Institution, PO Box 37012, NHB-119, Washington, D.C. 20013-7012, USA;cObservatorio Vulcanológico de la Universidad de Colima, Av. 25 de Julio # 965 Colonia Villa San Sebastián, Colima, Col. C.P. 28045, Mexico
Abstract:Lava (n = 8) and bulk ash samples (n = 6) erupted between July 1999 and June 2005 were investigated to extend time-series compositional and textural studies of the products erupted from Volcán Colima since 1869. In particular, we seek to evaluate the possibility that the current activity will culminate in major explosive Plinian-style event similar to that in 1913. Lava samples continue to show relatively heterogeneous whole-rock compositions with some significant mafic spikes (1999, 2001) as have prevailed since 1976. Groundmass SiO2 contents continue trends to lower levels that have prevailed since 1961, in the direction of the still lower groundmass SiO2 contents found in 1913 scoriae. Importantly, ash samples from investigated Vulcanian-style explosive eruptions in 2005 are devoid of particles with micro-vesiculated groundmass textures; such textures characterized the 1913 scoriae, signifying expansion of in-situ magmatic gas as the propellant of the 1913 eruption. All magmas erupted since 1913 appear to have arrived in the upper volcanic conduit system in a degassed state. The small to moderate Vulcanian-style explosive eruptions, which have been common since 1999 (> 16,000 events), have blasted ash clouds as high as 11 km a.s.l. and sent pyroclastic flows out to distances of 5 km. These eruptions do not appear to be powered by expansion of in-situ magmatic gas. New small lava domes have been observed in the crater prior to many explosive eruptions. These plugs of degassed lava may temporarily seal the conduit and allow the build-up of magmatic gases streaming upward from below ahead of rising and degassing magma. In this interpretation, when gas pressure exceeds the strength of the plug seal in the upper conduit, an explosive Vulcanian-style eruption occurs. Alternatively these explosive eruptions may represent interactions of hot rock and groundwater (phreato-magmatic).
Keywords:Colima  andesite  petrology  Mexican Volcanic Belt  Vulcanian eruptions
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