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Pre-eruption recharge of the Bishop magma system

January 1, 2007

The 650 km3 rhyolitic Bishop Tuff (eastern California, USA), which is stratigraphically zoned with respect to temperatures of mineral equilibration, reflects a corresponding thermal gradient in the source magma chamber. Consistent with previous work, application of the new TitaniQ (Ti-in-quartz) thermometer to quartz phenocryst rims documents an ∼100 °C temperature increase with chamber depth at the time of eruption. Application of TitaniQ to quartz phenocryst cores, however, reveals lower temperatures and an earlier gradient that was less steep, with temperature increasing with depth by only ∼30 °C. In many late-erupted crystals, sharp boundaries that separate low-temperature cores from high-temperature rims cut internal cathodoluminescent growth zoning, indicating partial phenocryst dissolution prior to crystallization of the high-temperature rims. Rimward jumps in Ti concentration across these boundaries are too abrupt (e.g., 40 ppm across a distance of

Publication Year 2007
Title Pre-eruption recharge of the Bishop magma system
DOI 10.1130/G23316A.1
Authors D.A. Wark, W. Hildreth, F.S. Spear, D.J. Cherniak, E.B. Watson
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Geology
Index ID 70032797
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Volcano Hazards Program
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