Shallow magma diversions during explosive maar-diatreme eruptions in
mafic volcanic fields
Abstract
Maar-diatremes are inverted conical structures formed by subterranean
excavation and remobilization of country rocks during explosive
volcanism and common in mafic volcanic fields. We focus on impacts of
excavation and filling of maar-diatremes on the local state of stress,
and its subsequent influence on underlying feeder dikes, which are
critical for understanding the development of intrusive networks that
feed surface eruptions. We address this issue using finite element
models in COMSOL Multiphysics®. Inverted conical structures of varying
sizes are excavated in a gravitationally loaded elastic half-space, and
then progressively filled with volcaniclastic material, resulting in
changes in the orientations and magnitudes of stresses generated within
surrounding rocks and within the filling portion of the maar-diatreme.
Our results show that rapid unloading during maar-diatreme excavation
generates a horizontal compressive stress state beneath diatremes. These
stresses allow magma to divert laterally as saucer-shaped sills and
circumferential dikes at varying depths in the shallow feeder system,
and produce intrusion geometries consistent with both field observations
from exhumed volcanic fields and conceptual models of diatreme growth.
Stresses generated in these models also provide an explanation for the
evolving locations of fragmentation zones over the course of diatreme’s
filling. In particular, results from this study suggest that: (1)
extensional stresses at the base of the diatreme fill favor magma ascent
in the lower half of the structure, and possibly promote volatile
exsolution and magma fragmentation; and (2) increased filling of
diatremes creates a shallow compressive stress state that can inhibit
magma ascent to the surface, promoting widespread intra-diatreme
explosions, efficient mixing of host rock, and upward widening of the
diatreme structure.