Microlite Size Distributions and P-T-t-x (H2O) constraints of Central
Plateau tephras, New Zealand: implications for magma ascent processes of
explosive eruptions
Abstract
Crystals within erupted volcanic rocks record geochemical and textural
signatures during magmatic evolution prior to the onset of eruptions.
Growth times of microlites can be derived through Crystal Size
Distribution (CSD) analysis combined with well-constrained microlite
growth rates, yielding petrologically-determined magma ascent
timescales. Our newly developed, machine learning image processing
scheme allows for the rapid generation of CSD, saving many hours of
processing time, which previously involved hand-drawing the outer
margins of crystals. For the present study, we examined a range of
andesitic tephras from the Tongariro Volcanic Centre, New Zealand. A
total of 228 plagioclase and pyroxene microlites CSDs were generated
from individual tephra shards. All combined pyroxene and plagioclase
microlite CSDs exhibit concave-up shapes, and similar intercepts and
slopes at the smallest sizes. This implies similar growth durations of
the smallest microlites of 15±9 to 28±15 (2σ) hours, regardless of the
eruptive style or source, using an orthopyroxene microlite growth rate
constrained from one of the samples. The orthopyroxene thermometer and
the plagioclase hygrometer reveal the magmas were erupted at
~ 1079 to 1149 (±39 SEE), and H2O contents ranging from
0-0.4 to 0-1.7 wt.% (95% confidence maxima). In the absence of CO2,
these results indicate shallow H2O exsolution pressures of <
240 bars, using a recent H2O-CO2 solubility model. Given the microlite
residence times, shallow H2O exsolution driving microlite growth is
inconsistent with the explosivity of the eruptions. Instead, our data
suggest that the melts either carried large amounts of CO2, triggering
earlier degassing of volatiles including H2O, or that microlite
crystallisation began prior to degassing. Ongoing work investigates the
H2O and CO2 contents hosted by melt inclusions in phenocrysts and
microphenocrysts in these tephras to provide constraints on magma ascent
rates, with implications for hazard characterization and mitigation.