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Geochemistry and evolution of the Santiaguito volcanic dome complex, Guatemala

Journal article published in 2013 by Jeannie A. Jaj Scott, Dm Pyle ORCID, Ta Mather ORCID, Wi Rose
This paper was not found in any repository; the policy of its publisher is unknown or unclear.
This paper was not found in any repository; the policy of its publisher is unknown or unclear.

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Abstract

One of the longest continuous periods of dome-forming activity on record is the ongoing eruption of Santiaguito, Guatemala. Dome-building began in 1922, within the crater formed during the cataclysmic 1902 eruption of Santa María, and continues today. The earliest erupted Santiaguito lavas are chemically and mineralogically identical to the dacite pumice erupted in 1902. The erupted magma has become progressively less evolved over time, with a decrease in whole rock SiO2 from ~66 to ~62wt.% from 1922 to 2002. New geochemical data from Santiaguito are consistent with a model of magma being extracted progressively from a chemically-stratified lower crustal (~12 to ~25km) storage zone thought to have formed during the ~25ka of quiescence that preceded the 1902 eruption. The bimodal distribution of plagioclase phenocryst core compositions in early Santiaguito lavas suggests that they were strongly influenced by magma mixing in addition to fractional crystallization. However, lavas erupted since the 1940s show a unimodal distribution, suggesting a diminishing role for mixing within the Santiaguito system. Trace element data suggest that the decrease in silica content over time is best explained by a decrease in the extent of fractional crystallization of ~15% over the 80years covered by our sample set. © 2012 Elsevier B.V.