Rehydrated glass embayments record the cooling of a Yellowstone ignimbrite

Author:

Befus Kenneth S.1ORCID,Thompson James O.1,Allison Chelsea M.1,Ruefer Anna C.1,Manga Michael2

Affiliation:

1. 1Department of Geosciences, Baylor University, Waco, Texas 76798, USA

2. 2Department of Earth and Planetary Science, University of California–Berkeley, Berkeley, California 94720-4767, USA

Abstract

Abstract Hydration fronts penetrate 50–135 μm into glassy rhyolite embayments hosted in quartz crystals from the Mesa Falls Tuff in the Yellowstone Plateau volcanic field. The hydration fronts occur as steep enrichments that reach 2.4 ± 0.6 wt% H2O at the embayment opening, representing much higher values than interior concentrations of 0.9 ± 0.2 wt% H2O. Molecular water accounts for most of the water enrichment. Water speciation indicates the hydration fronts comprise absorbed meteoric water that modified the original magmatic composition of the rhyolitic glass. We used finite difference diffusion models to demonstrate that glass rehydration was likely produced over a few decades as the ignimbrite cooled. Such temperatures and time scales are consistent with rare firsthand observations of decadal hydrothermal systems associated with cooling ignimbrites at Mount Pinatubo (Philippines) and the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes (Alaska).

Publisher

Geological Society of America

Reference34 articles.

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5. Low-δD hydration rinds in Yellowstone perlites record rapid syneruptive hydration during glacial and interglacial conditions;Bindeman;Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology,2016

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