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Published February 1999 | public
Journal Article

Degassing and microlite crystallization during pre-climactic events of the 1991 eruption of Mt. Pinatubo, Philippines

Abstract

Dacite tephras produced by the 1991 pre-climactic eruptive sequence at Mt. Pinatubo display extreme heterogeneity in vesicularity, ranging in clast density from 700 to 2580 kg m^(–3). Observations of the 13 surge-producing blasts that preceded the climactic plinian event include radar-defined estimates of column heights and seismically defined eruptive and intra-eruptive durations. A comparison of the characteristics of erupted material, including microlite textures, chemical compositions, and H_2O contents, with eruptive parameters suggests that devolatilization-induced crystallization of the magma occurred to a varying extent prior to at least nine of the explosive events. Although volatile loss progressed to the same approximate level in all of the clasts analyzed (weight percent H_2O=1.26-1.73), microlite crystallization was extremely variable (0–22%). We infer that syn-eruptive volatile exsolution from magma in the conduit and intra-eruptive separation of the gas phase was facilitated by the development of permeability within magma residing in the conduit. Correlation of maximum microlite crystallinity with repose interval duration (28–262 min) suggests that crystallization occurred primarily intra-eruptively, in response to the reduction in dissolved H_2O content that occurred during the preceding event. Detailed textural characterization, including determination of three-dimensional shapes and crystal size distributions (CSD), was conducted on a subset of clasts in order to determine rates of crystal nucleation and growth using repose interval as the time available for crystallization. Shape and size analysis suggests that crystallization proceeded in response to lessening degrees of feldspar supersaturation as repose interval durations increased. We thus propose that during repose intervals, a plug of highly viscous magma formed due to the collapse of vesicular magma that had exsolved volatiles during the previous explosive event. If plug thickness grew proportionally to the square root of time, and if magma pressurization increased during the eruptive sequence, the frequency of eruptive pulses may have been modulated by degassing of magma within the conduit. Dense clasts in surge deposits probably represent plug material entrained by each subsequent explosive event.

Additional Information

© 1999 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg. Received: 4 December 1997; Accepted: 13 September 1998. Images and electron microprobe analyses were collected under the guidance of M. Shaffer at the EPMA facility in the Department of Geological Sciences at the University of Oregon, funded by grants from the W.M. Keck Foundation and the National Science Foundation. We thank J. Pallister for samples of Pinatubo andesite and climactic dacite. Reviews by C. Gardner, J. Lowenstern, M. Higgins, and M. Rutherford improved the manuscript and are greatly appreciated. This study was supported by grants to K. Cashman (NSF EAR-9418008 and EAR-9614753) and to E. Stolper (NSF OCE-9416747 and DOE DEFG03-85ER13445).

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 25, 2023