Highly explosive basaltic eruptions driven by CO2 exsolution

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Chelsea M. Allison
Kurt Roggensack
Amanda B. Clarke
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[1] Arizona State University,School of Earth and Space Exploration
[2] Cornell University,Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences
[3] City University of New York,City College of New York
[4] Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia,undefined
[5] Sezione di Pisa Via della Faggiola,undefined
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The most explosive basaltic scoria cone eruption yet documented (>20 km high plumes) occurred at Sunset Crater (Arizona) ca. 1085 AD by undetermined eruptive mechanisms. We present melt inclusion analysis, including bubble contents by Raman spectroscopy, yielding high total CO2 (approaching 6000 ppm) and S (~2000 ppm) with moderate H2O (~1.25 wt%). Two groups of melt inclusions are evident, classified by bubble vol%. Modeling of post-entrapment modification indicates that the group with larger bubbles formed as a result of heterogeneous entrapment of melt and exsolved CO2 and provides evidence for an exsolved CO2 phase at magma storage depths of ~15 km. We argue that this exsolved CO2 phase played a critical role in driving this explosive eruption, possibly analogous to H2O exsolution driving silicic caldera-forming eruptions. Because of their distinct gas compositions relative to silicic magmas (high S and CO2), even modest volume explosive basaltic eruptions could impact the atmosphere.
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