Repeated Ductile-Brittle-Ductile Flow During the Emplacement of Silicic
Lava: Strain Rate-Dependent Deformation, Tephra Production, and Healing
- Shelby Isom,
- Graham Andrews,
- Alan Whittington
Abstract
Multiple generations of ductile and brittle deformation recorded in the
Obsidian Dome lava, California, inform on the rheological complexities
of silicic lava emplacement. Understanding the non-linear rheological
evolution of advancing lava is key to improving understanding of the
durations, extents, and explosive hazards of future eruptions. Numerous
studies of silicic lavas, at Obsidian Dome in particular, have focused
on micro-scale textures and features interpreted to record flow within
the conduit, primarily. How the lava flowed as a growing mass outside
the conduit is largely unconstrained. Field observations at Obsidian
Dome identify cycles of ductile flow followed by brittle fracturing,
followed by relaxation and continued flow. Mode 1 vertical fractures
often served as conduits for tephra venting, presumably following
spontaneous exsolution-driven vesiculation and volume expansion deeper
in the lava. Tephra, often tack-welded to the fracture surfaces, are
preserved in many fractures that clearly closed-up on relaxation of the
obsidian. Therefore, crossing the glass transition was likely strain
rate driven, rather than cooling- or exsolution-driven that would have
inhibited relaxation after the stress was released. The interplay
between flow and fracturing is also evident in the ubiquity of crease
structures at decimeter to decameter scales over all of Obsidian Dome.
Unraveling the complexities of flow and fracturing in obsidian lavas
will require and enable improved understanding of similarly non-linear
rheological evolutions in ice, salt, the mid crust, and the
asthenosphere.