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Origin and evolution of a peraluminous silicic ignimbrite suite: The Violet Town Volcanics

Authors :
Victor J. Wall
John D. Clemens
Source :
Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology. 88:354-371
Publication Year :
1984
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 1984.

Abstract

The Violet Town Volcanics are a 373 Ma old, comagmatic, S-type volcanic sequence mainly comprising crystal-rich intracaldera ignimbrites. Rock types vary from rhyolites to rhyodacites, all containing magmatic cordierite and garnet phenocrysts. Variation in the suite is primarily due to fractionation of early-crystallized quartz, plagioclase and biotite (plus minor accessory phases) in a high-level magma chamber prior to eruption. Early magmatic crystallization occurred at around 4 kb and 850° C with melt water contents between 2.8 and 4 wt.%. This high-temperature, markedly water-undersaturated, restite-poor, granitic magma was generated by partial melting reactions involving biotite breakdown in a dominantly quartzofeldspathic source terrain, leaving a granulite facies residue.

Details

ISSN :
14320967 and 00107999
Volume :
88
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........fd00cc01e4114aac632664610ce8fea6