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CO2 favours the accumulation of excess fluids in felsic magmas
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<p>Volcano deformation and gas emissions provide insights into subsurface magmatic systems. Large discrepancies are observed between the volumes calculated from deformation data, mass of emitted gases, and volumes of erupted magmas. Such discrepancies hinder our capacity to predict the magnitude and intensity of imminent eruptions and are ascribed to the amount of excess fluids stored in magma reservoirs. High-pressure (1240 bar) and high-temperature (1200 &#176;C) hot isostatic press experiments show that the amount of trapped excess fluids in haplogranitic magmas with variable crystal contents (30, 50, 60, and 70 vol.%) depends strongly on fluid composition. Magmas with CO<sub>2</sub> excess fluids become permeable at much larger porosities (44% higher) with respect to the H<sub>2</sub>O-rich counterparts at equivalent crystallinity. Available excess gas geochemistry data calculated from volatile-saturated melt inclusion record, syn-eruptive SO<sub>2</sub> emission, and erupted juvenile porosity data collected for crystal-rich andesite and crystal-poor dacite/rhyolite volcanoes with known eruption magnitude and intensity (Mt St Helens 1980, Pinatubo 1991, Soufri&#232;re Hills 1996, and Merapi 2010) reveal that the discrepancy between erupted magma volume and SO<sub>2</sub> released during the eruption increases with CO<sub>2</sub> excess in magmas. In agreement with our experiments, these data highlight that CO<sub>2</sub>-rich fluids enhance magma&#8217;s capacity to store excess volatiles and shed light on the largest discrepancies between pre-eruptive deformation, gas emissions, and eruption intensity and magnitude.</p>
Title: CO2 favours the accumulation of excess fluids in felsic magmas
Description:
<p>Volcano deformation and gas emissions provide insights into subsurface magmatic systems.
Large discrepancies are observed between the volumes calculated from deformation data, mass of emitted gases, and volumes of erupted magmas.
Such discrepancies hinder our capacity to predict the magnitude and intensity of imminent eruptions and are ascribed to the amount of excess fluids stored in magma reservoirs.
High-pressure (1240 bar) and high-temperature (1200 &#176;C) hot isostatic press experiments show that the amount of trapped excess fluids in haplogranitic magmas with variable crystal contents (30, 50, 60, and 70 vol.
%) depends strongly on fluid composition.
Magmas with CO<sub>2</sub> excess fluids become permeable at much larger porosities (44% higher) with respect to the H<sub>2</sub>O-rich counterparts at equivalent crystallinity.
Available excess gas geochemistry data calculated from volatile-saturated melt inclusion record, syn-eruptive SO<sub>2</sub> emission, and erupted juvenile porosity data collected for crystal-rich andesite and crystal-poor dacite/rhyolite volcanoes with known eruption magnitude and intensity (Mt St Helens 1980, Pinatubo 1991, Soufri&#232;re Hills 1996, and Merapi 2010) reveal that the discrepancy between erupted magma volume and SO<sub>2</sub> released during the eruption increases with CO<sub>2</sub> excess in magmas.
In agreement with our experiments, these data highlight that CO<sub>2</sub>-rich fluids enhance magma&#8217;s capacity to store excess volatiles and shed light on the largest discrepancies between pre-eruptive deformation, gas emissions, and eruption intensity and magnitude.
</p>.
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