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Dynamic Magma Systems: Implications for Forecasting Volcanic Activity

, 2017
Magma systems that supply volcanoes can extend throughout the crust and consist of mush (melt within a crystalline framework) together with ephemeral magma accumulations.
R. Sparks, K. Cashman
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Silicic Magmas (Magma Formation in the Crust)

1971
In deeply eroded ancient fold regions, levels are exposed at which silicic magma was once generated. From the field of abyssal geology proper, we now move over to conditions of investigation more customary to us, and it may be comparatively easy to draw some conclusions.
openaire   +2 more sources

Temperature of Vesuvius magmas

Geology, 1999
Melt inclusions in Ca-pyroxenes from pyroclasts of several Vesuvius eruptions show that pyroxenes (Wo 46–48 -En 45–50 to Wo 50–52 -En 20–25 ) formed in shallow reservoirs from K-basalt and/or K-tephrite to K-phonolite magmas over a wide temperature range (800–1200 °C).
Cioni R   +2 more
openaire   +4 more sources

Meteoric Water in Magmas

Science, 1974
Oxygen isotope analyses of sanidine phenocrysts from rhyolitic sequences in Nevada, Colorado, and the Yellowstone Plateau volcanic field show that δ 18 O decreased in these magmas as a function of time. This decrease in δ 18 O may have been caused by isotopic exchange between the magma and ...
Jim D. Gleason   +4 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Gradients in silicic magma chambers: Implications for lithospheric magmatism

, 1981
Every large eruption of nonbasaltic magma taps a magma reservoir that is thermally and compositionally zoned. Most small eruptions also tap parts of heterogeneous and evolving magmatic systems.
W. Hildreth
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Magma Fragmentation

Reviews in Mineralogy & Geochemistry, 2022
B. Scheu, Donald Bruce Dingwell
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Magma Production Rates for Intraoceanic Arcs

, 2015
Intraoceanic volcanic arcs have long been recognized as sites where continental crust is created. Yet, despite their importance to understanding magmatic systems and the evolution of our planet, very little is known about their long-term rates of magma ...
B. Jicha, O. Jagoutz
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The breaking of magma

Geological Magazine, 1969
SUMMARYBreadcrust blocks (bombs) on Vulcano, Sicily, show features which indicate that when they were of viscous lava they broke when stress was applied rapidly, and later flowed when it was applied slowly. If the magma of granitic intrusions behaves similarly, the perplexing “relict dykes” can be explained as due to the breaking of the magma and the ...
openaire   +2 more sources

THE SEARCH FOR MAGMA

The Leading Edge, 1983
Magma, or molten rock, is the ultimate heat source for geothermal fields. In conventional geothermal applications the energy from magma is tapped indirectly in natural geothermal fields usually associated with magma bodies. Many magma sources, however, lack an adequate geothermal field for exploitation. Enormous quantities of energy are stored in magma
openaire   +2 more sources

Evaluating volumes for magma chambers and magma withdrawn for caldera collapse

Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 2014
Article history: We develop an analytical model to infer the total volume of a magma chamber associated with caldera collapse and the critical volume of magma that must be withdrawn to induce caldera collapse. The diameter of caldera border fault, depth to the magma chamber, and volumes of magma erupted before the onset of collapse and of entire ...
Geshi N, Ruch J, ACOCELLA, Valerio
openaire   +3 more sources

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