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Published October 1996 | public
Journal Article

Oxygen isotopic and geochemical evidence for a short-lived, high-temperature hydrothermal event in the Chegem caldera, Caucasus Mountains, Russia

Abstract

Within the 2.8 Ma Chegem ash-flow caldera (11 × 15 km), a single cooling unit of rhyolitic to dacitic welded tuff more than 2 km thick is exposed in deep valleys incised during recent rapid uplift of the Caucasus Mountains. The intracaldera tuff is mineralogically fresh and unaltered, and is overlain by andesite lavas and cut by a resurgent granodiorite intrusion. Major- and trace-element compositions for a 1405-m stratigraphic section of intracaldera tuff display trends of upwardly increasing Na_2O, CaO, A1_2O_3, total Fe, MgO, TiO_2, Sr and Zr and decreasing SiO_2, K_2O and Rb. This mafic-upward zoning (from 76.1 to 69.9% SiO_2) reflects an inverted view of the upper part of the source magma chamber. Oxygen isotope studies of 35 samples from this 1405-m section define a striking profile with "normal" igneous δ^(18)O values (+7.0 to +8.5) in the lower 600 m of tuff, much lower δ^(18)O values (−4.0 to +4.3) in a 700-m zone above that and a shift to high δ^(18)O values (+4.4 to +10.9) in the upper 100 m of caldera-fill exposure. Data from two other partial stratigraphic sections indicate that these oxygen isotope systematics are probably a caldera-wide phenomenon. Quartz and feldspar phenocrysts everywhere have "normal" igneous δ^(18)O values of about +8.5 and +7.5, respectively, whereas groundmass and glass δ^(18)O values range from −7.7 to +12.3. Consequently, the δ^(18)O values of coexisting feldspar, groundmass and glass form a steep array in a plot of δ_(feldspar) vs. δ_(groundmss/glass). Such pronounced disequilibrium between coexisting feldspar and groundmass or glass has never before been observed on this scale. It requires a hydrothermal event involving large amounts of low-^(18)O H_2O at sufficiently high temperatures and short enough time (tens of years or less) that glass exchanges thoroughly but feldspar does not. The most likely process responsible for the ^(18)O depletions at Chegem is a very high temperature (500–600 °C), short-lived, vigorous meteoric-hydrothermal event that was focused within the upper 750 m of intracaldera tuff. Mass balance calculations indicate fluid fluxes of ≈ 6 × 10^(−6) molcm^(−2) s^(−1). We believe that the closest historical analogue to this Chegem hydrothermal event is the situation observed in the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes (Alaska, USA), where hundreds of steam fumaroles with measured temperatures as high as 645 °C persisted for 10 to 15 years in the much smaller welded ash-flow tuff sheet (≈ 200 m thick) produced by the 1912 Katmai eruption.

Additional Information

© 1996 Elsevier Science B.V. Received 29 August 1995; accepted 11 February 1996. This research was part of the Caucasus-Western USA cooperative project which was supported by the Russian Academy of Sciences, the U.S. National Academy of Science, and the U.S. Geological Survey. The authors are grateful to Peter Lipman for his extremely helpful encouragement and guidance on this project, as well as to Charles Bacon and an anonymous reviewer for their helpful comments on the manuscript. We also thank Valentine Beus, Anatoly Gurbanov, Nikolai Koronovsky, Igana Latifova, and Peter Marchev for sharing in discussions, field work and sample collection. Financial support for this study was also provided by NSF grant EAR90-19190, Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, 91125. Contribution No. 5618, Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences, California Institute of Technology.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023