Origin of a rhyolite that intruded a geothermal well while drilling at the Krafla volcano, Iceland
Magma flowed into an exploratory geothermal well at 2.1 km depth being drilled in the Krafla central volcano in Iceland, creating a unique opportunity to study rhyolite magma in situ in a basaltic environment. The quenched magma is a partly vesicular, sparsely phyric, glass containing ∼1.8% of dissolved volatiles. Based on calculated H2O-CO2 saturation pressures, it degassed at a pressure intermediate between hydrostatic and lithostatic, and geothermometry indicates that the crystals in the melt formed at ∼900 °C. The glass shows no signs of hydrothermal alteration, but its hydrogen and oxygen isotopic ratios are much lower than those of typical mantle-derived magmas, indicating that this rhyolite originated by anhydrous mantle-derived magma assimilating partially melted hydrothermally altered basalts.
Citation Information
Publication Year | 2011 |
---|---|
Title | Origin of a rhyolite that intruded a geothermal well while drilling at the Krafla volcano, Iceland |
DOI | 10.1130/G31393.1 |
Authors | W.A. Elders, G.O. Fridleifsson, R.A. Zierenberg, E.C. Pope, A.K. Mortensen, A. Gudmundsson, Jacob B. Lowenstern, N.E. Marks, L. Owens, D.K. Bird, M. Reed, N.J. Olsen, P. Schiffman |
Publication Type | Article |
Publication Subtype | Journal Article |
Series Title | Geology |
Index ID | 70035895 |
Record Source | USGS Publications Warehouse |
USGS Organization | Volcano Science Center |