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Melt movement through the Icelandic crust

Authors :
Thorbjörg Ágústsdóttir
John Maclennan
Tim Greenfield
Marie Edmonds
Robert S. White
White, Robert [0000-0002-2972-397X]
Edmonds, Marie [0000-0003-1243-137X]
Maclennan, John [0000-0001-6857-9600]
Greenfield, Timothy [0000-0002-4370-7298]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Source :
1364-503X Online ISSN 1471-2962
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
The Royal Society Publishing, 2019.

Abstract

We use both seismology and geobarometry to investigate the movement of melt through the volcanic crust of Iceland. We have captured melt in the act of moving within or through a series of sills ranging from the upper mantle to the shallow crust by the clusters of small earthquakes it produces as it forces its way upward. The melt is injected not just beneath the central volcanoes, but also at discrete locations along the rift zones and above the centre of the underlying mantle plume. We suggest that the high strain rates required to produce seismicity at depths of 10–25 km in a normally ductile part of the Icelandic crust are linked to the exsolution of carbon dioxide from the basaltic melts. The seismicity and geobarometry provide complementary information on the way that the melt moves through the crust, stalling and fractionating, and often freezing in one or more melt lenses on its way upwards: the seismicity shows what is happening instantaneously today, while the geobarometry gives constraints averaged over longer time scales on the depths of residence in the crust of melts prior to their eruption. This article is part of the Theo Murphy meeting issue ‘Magma reservoir architecture and dynamics'.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
1364-503X Online ISSN 1471-2962
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....44e31d387894f5534d922b0745c82f9b