Caldera Life-Cycles of the Yellowstone Hotspot Track: Death and Rebirth of the Heise Caldera

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschungPeer-Review

Autorschaft

  • Marlon M. Jean
  • Eric H. Christiansen
  • Duane E. Champion
  • Scott K. Vetter
  • William M. Phillips
  • Stephan Schuth
  • John W. Shervais

Organisationseinheiten

Externe Organisationen

  • Brigham Young University
  • Centenary College of Louisiana
  • University of Idaho
  • Utah State University
  • Southwest Biological Science Center (SBSC)
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Details

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Seiten (von - bis)1643-1670
Seitenumfang28
FachzeitschriftJournal of Petrology
Jahrgang59
Ausgabenummer8
Frühes Online-Datum25 Juli 2018
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - Aug. 2018

Abstract

As one of the most geochemically unique drill cores recovered within the Yellowstone-Snake River Plain (YSRP) province, the Sugar City geothermal test well was drilled into intra-caldera rhyolite lavas and tuffs erupted during the middle to late Pliocene and the resurgent basaltic volcanism erupted during the Pleistocene. This sequence parallels the two main stages proposed for YSRP hotspot calderas: i.e. the eruption of several large-volume, ash-flow tuff sheets followed by caldera collapse, then cessation of major rhyolitic activity and gradual subsidence accompanied by filling and eventual burial of the caldera by basalt lava flows. We employ stratigraphic relationships, paleomagnetism, and major, trace element, and Sr-Nd isotope geochemistry to develop models for the origin of the basaltic and rhyolitic magmas within a geographical and temporal context. The basalts are characterized by distinct groupings based on depth and geochemistry and reflect the dominant compositions observed on the surface, e.g. Snake River olivine tholeiite (SROT) and evolved type (e.g. Craters of the Moon). We also observe contaminated basalts that interacted with rhyolite/granite. The basaltic magma formed by shallow partial melting in the plume channel carved into the lithosphere. The older rhyolites preserve the classical characteristics of A-type granites and display major element and trace element concentrations typical for Eastern SRP caldera centres and minimal stratigraphic variation. Multiple lines of evidence document extensive magmatic differentiation and coupled basalt-rhyolite interactions. We find that the most plausible origin for the rhyolites is via partial melting of a hybrid source, comprising Archean crustal components and younger juvenile mafic intrusions. Assimilation of hydrothermally altered material is also required for some eruptive units. The rhyolites did not evolve from residual magma left over from the climactic Kilgore eruption (4.0 Ma), but instead represent discrete magma generation events in the course of a few hundred thousand years between 4.0 to 3.8 Ma. Beginning at approximately 3.3 Ma, basalts were able to erupt through the solidified composite pluton that formed below the caldera. The transition from rhyolite to basalt is tied to the declining flux of basaltic magma as North America moved away from the Yellowstone hotspot core.

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Caldera Life-Cycles of the Yellowstone Hotspot Track: Death and Rebirth of the Heise Caldera. / Jean, Marlon M.; Christiansen, Eric H.; Champion, Duane E. et al.
in: Journal of Petrology, Jahrgang 59, Nr. 8, 08.2018, S. 1643-1670.

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschungPeer-Review

Jean, MM, Christiansen, EH, Champion, DE, Vetter, SK, Phillips, WM, Schuth, S & Shervais, JW 2018, 'Caldera Life-Cycles of the Yellowstone Hotspot Track: Death and Rebirth of the Heise Caldera', Journal of Petrology, Jg. 59, Nr. 8, S. 1643-1670. https://doi.org/10.1093/petrology/egy074
Jean, M. M., Christiansen, E. H., Champion, D. E., Vetter, S. K., Phillips, W. M., Schuth, S., & Shervais, J. W. (2018). Caldera Life-Cycles of the Yellowstone Hotspot Track: Death and Rebirth of the Heise Caldera. Journal of Petrology, 59(8), 1643-1670. https://doi.org/10.1093/petrology/egy074
Jean MM, Christiansen EH, Champion DE, Vetter SK, Phillips WM, Schuth S et al. Caldera Life-Cycles of the Yellowstone Hotspot Track: Death and Rebirth of the Heise Caldera. Journal of Petrology. 2018 Aug;59(8):1643-1670. Epub 2018 Jul 25. doi: 10.1093/petrology/egy074
Jean, Marlon M. ; Christiansen, Eric H. ; Champion, Duane E. et al. / Caldera Life-Cycles of the Yellowstone Hotspot Track: Death and Rebirth of the Heise Caldera. in: Journal of Petrology. 2018 ; Jahrgang 59, Nr. 8. S. 1643-1670.
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title = "Caldera Life-Cycles of the Yellowstone Hotspot Track: Death and Rebirth of the Heise Caldera",
abstract = "As one of the most geochemically unique drill cores recovered within the Yellowstone-Snake River Plain (YSRP) province, the Sugar City geothermal test well was drilled into intra-caldera rhyolite lavas and tuffs erupted during the middle to late Pliocene and the resurgent basaltic volcanism erupted during the Pleistocene. This sequence parallels the two main stages proposed for YSRP hotspot calderas: i.e. the eruption of several large-volume, ash-flow tuff sheets followed by caldera collapse, then cessation of major rhyolitic activity and gradual subsidence accompanied by filling and eventual burial of the caldera by basalt lava flows. We employ stratigraphic relationships, paleomagnetism, and major, trace element, and Sr-Nd isotope geochemistry to develop models for the origin of the basaltic and rhyolitic magmas within a geographical and temporal context. The basalts are characterized by distinct groupings based on depth and geochemistry and reflect the dominant compositions observed on the surface, e.g. Snake River olivine tholeiite (SROT) and evolved type (e.g. Craters of the Moon). We also observe contaminated basalts that interacted with rhyolite/granite. The basaltic magma formed by shallow partial melting in the plume channel carved into the lithosphere. The older rhyolites preserve the classical characteristics of A-type granites and display major element and trace element concentrations typical for Eastern SRP caldera centres and minimal stratigraphic variation. Multiple lines of evidence document extensive magmatic differentiation and coupled basalt-rhyolite interactions. We find that the most plausible origin for the rhyolites is via partial melting of a hybrid source, comprising Archean crustal components and younger juvenile mafic intrusions. Assimilation of hydrothermally altered material is also required for some eruptive units. The rhyolites did not evolve from residual magma left over from the climactic Kilgore eruption (4.0 Ma), but instead represent discrete magma generation events in the course of a few hundred thousand years between 4.0 to 3.8 Ma. Beginning at approximately 3.3 Ma, basalts were able to erupt through the solidified composite pluton that formed below the caldera. The transition from rhyolite to basalt is tied to the declining flux of basaltic magma as North America moved away from the Yellowstone hotspot core.",
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note = "Funding Information: Part of this research was supported by an instrumentation grant to EHC from the U.S. National Science Foundation (EAR-0923495) and by Department of Energy grants EE-0002848 and EE-0006733 to JWS. Additional support was provided by the Alexander von Humboldt Research Fellowship for Postdoctoral Researchers to MMJ.",
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Download

TY - JOUR

T1 - Caldera Life-Cycles of the Yellowstone Hotspot Track: Death and Rebirth of the Heise Caldera

AU - Jean, Marlon M.

AU - Christiansen, Eric H.

AU - Champion, Duane E.

AU - Vetter, Scott K.

AU - Phillips, William M.

AU - Schuth, Stephan

AU - Shervais, John W.

N1 - Funding Information: Part of this research was supported by an instrumentation grant to EHC from the U.S. National Science Foundation (EAR-0923495) and by Department of Energy grants EE-0002848 and EE-0006733 to JWS. Additional support was provided by the Alexander von Humboldt Research Fellowship for Postdoctoral Researchers to MMJ.

PY - 2018/8

Y1 - 2018/8

N2 - As one of the most geochemically unique drill cores recovered within the Yellowstone-Snake River Plain (YSRP) province, the Sugar City geothermal test well was drilled into intra-caldera rhyolite lavas and tuffs erupted during the middle to late Pliocene and the resurgent basaltic volcanism erupted during the Pleistocene. This sequence parallels the two main stages proposed for YSRP hotspot calderas: i.e. the eruption of several large-volume, ash-flow tuff sheets followed by caldera collapse, then cessation of major rhyolitic activity and gradual subsidence accompanied by filling and eventual burial of the caldera by basalt lava flows. We employ stratigraphic relationships, paleomagnetism, and major, trace element, and Sr-Nd isotope geochemistry to develop models for the origin of the basaltic and rhyolitic magmas within a geographical and temporal context. The basalts are characterized by distinct groupings based on depth and geochemistry and reflect the dominant compositions observed on the surface, e.g. Snake River olivine tholeiite (SROT) and evolved type (e.g. Craters of the Moon). We also observe contaminated basalts that interacted with rhyolite/granite. The basaltic magma formed by shallow partial melting in the plume channel carved into the lithosphere. The older rhyolites preserve the classical characteristics of A-type granites and display major element and trace element concentrations typical for Eastern SRP caldera centres and minimal stratigraphic variation. Multiple lines of evidence document extensive magmatic differentiation and coupled basalt-rhyolite interactions. We find that the most plausible origin for the rhyolites is via partial melting of a hybrid source, comprising Archean crustal components and younger juvenile mafic intrusions. Assimilation of hydrothermally altered material is also required for some eruptive units. The rhyolites did not evolve from residual magma left over from the climactic Kilgore eruption (4.0 Ma), but instead represent discrete magma generation events in the course of a few hundred thousand years between 4.0 to 3.8 Ma. Beginning at approximately 3.3 Ma, basalts were able to erupt through the solidified composite pluton that formed below the caldera. The transition from rhyolite to basalt is tied to the declining flux of basaltic magma as North America moved away from the Yellowstone hotspot core.

AB - As one of the most geochemically unique drill cores recovered within the Yellowstone-Snake River Plain (YSRP) province, the Sugar City geothermal test well was drilled into intra-caldera rhyolite lavas and tuffs erupted during the middle to late Pliocene and the resurgent basaltic volcanism erupted during the Pleistocene. This sequence parallels the two main stages proposed for YSRP hotspot calderas: i.e. the eruption of several large-volume, ash-flow tuff sheets followed by caldera collapse, then cessation of major rhyolitic activity and gradual subsidence accompanied by filling and eventual burial of the caldera by basalt lava flows. We employ stratigraphic relationships, paleomagnetism, and major, trace element, and Sr-Nd isotope geochemistry to develop models for the origin of the basaltic and rhyolitic magmas within a geographical and temporal context. The basalts are characterized by distinct groupings based on depth and geochemistry and reflect the dominant compositions observed on the surface, e.g. Snake River olivine tholeiite (SROT) and evolved type (e.g. Craters of the Moon). We also observe contaminated basalts that interacted with rhyolite/granite. The basaltic magma formed by shallow partial melting in the plume channel carved into the lithosphere. The older rhyolites preserve the classical characteristics of A-type granites and display major element and trace element concentrations typical for Eastern SRP caldera centres and minimal stratigraphic variation. Multiple lines of evidence document extensive magmatic differentiation and coupled basalt-rhyolite interactions. We find that the most plausible origin for the rhyolites is via partial melting of a hybrid source, comprising Archean crustal components and younger juvenile mafic intrusions. Assimilation of hydrothermally altered material is also required for some eruptive units. The rhyolites did not evolve from residual magma left over from the climactic Kilgore eruption (4.0 Ma), but instead represent discrete magma generation events in the course of a few hundred thousand years between 4.0 to 3.8 Ma. Beginning at approximately 3.3 Ma, basalts were able to erupt through the solidified composite pluton that formed below the caldera. The transition from rhyolite to basalt is tied to the declining flux of basaltic magma as North America moved away from the Yellowstone hotspot core.

KW - Basalt-rhyolite petrogenesis

KW - Chemical stratigraphy

KW - Heise eruptive centre

KW - Hybridized basalt

KW - Nd-Sr isotopes

KW - Yellowstone hotspot

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