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Kilauea east rift zone magmatism: An episode 54 perspective

January 1, 2003

On January 29 30, 1997, prolonged steady-state effusion of lava from Pu'u'O'o was briefly disrupted by shallow extension beneath Napau Crater, 1 4 km uprift of the active Kilauea vent. A 23-h-long eruption (episode 54) ensued from fissures that were overlapping or en echelon with eruptive fissures formed during episode 1 in 1983 and those of earlier rift zone eruptions in 1963 and 1968. Combined geophysical and petrologic data for the 1994 1999 eruptive interval, including episode 54, reveal a variety of shallow magmatic conditions that persist in association with prolonged rift zone eruption. Near-vent lava samples document a significant range in composition, temperature and crystallinity of pre-eruptive magma. As supported by phenocryst liquid relations and Kilauea mineral thermometers established herein, the rift zone extension that led to episode 54 resulted in mixture of near-cotectic magma with discrete magma bodies cooled to ≤1100°C. Mixing models indicate that magmas isolated beneath Napau Crater since 1963 and 1968 constituted 32 65% of the hybrid mixtures erupted during episode 54. Geophysical measurements support passive displacement of open-system magma along the active east rift conduit into closed-system rift-reservoirs along a shallow zone of extension. Geophysical and petrologic data for early episode 55 document the gradual flushing of episode 54 related magma during magmatic recharge of the edifice.

Publication Year 2003
Title Kilauea east rift zone magmatism: An episode 54 perspective
DOI 10.1093/petrology/egg048
Authors C.R. Thornber, C. Heliker, D. R. Sherrod, J. P. Kauahikaua, Asta Miklius, P. G. Okubo, F. A. Trusdell, J. R. Budahn, W.I. Ridley, G.P. Meeker
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Journal of Petrology
Index ID 70025197
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse