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Henrietta E. Cathey, Barbara P. Nash
Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, 2009 188:173-185
The Bruneau–Jarbidge eruptive center of the central Snake River Plain in southern Idaho, USA produced
multiple rhyolite lava flows with volumes of <10 km3 to 200 km3 each from ~11.2 to 8.1 Ma, most of which
follow its climactic phase of large-volume explosive volcanism, represented by the Cougar Point Tuff, from
12.7 to 10.5 Ma. These lavas represent the waning stages of silicic volcanism at a major eruptive center of the
Yellowstone hotspot track. Here we provide pyroxene compositions and thermometry results from several
lavas that demonstrate that the demise of the silicic volcanic system was characterized by sustained, high
pre-eruptive magma temperatures (mostly =950 °C) prior to the onset of exclusively basaltic volcanism at
the eruptive center. Pyroxenes display a variety of textures in single samples, including solitary euhedral
crystals as well as glomerocrysts, crystal clots and annealed microgranular inclusions of pyroxene
±magnetite±plagioclase. Pigeonite and augite crystals are unzoned, and there are no detectable differences
in major and minor element compositions according to textural variety — mineral compositions in the
microgranular inclusions and crystal clots are identical to those of phenocrysts in the host lavas. In contrast to
members of the preceding Cougar Point Tuff that host polymodal glass and mineral populations, pyroxene
compositions in each of the lavas are characterized by single rather than multiple discrete compositional
modes. Collectively, the lavas reproduce and extend the range of Fe–Mg pyroxene compositional modes
observed in the Cougar Point Tuff to more Mg-rich varieties. The compositionally homogeneous populations
of pyroxene in each of the lavas, as well as the lack of core-to-rim zonation in individual crystals suggest that
individual eruptions each were fed by compositionally homogeneous magma reservoirs, and similarities with
the Cougar Point Tuff suggest consanguinity of such reservoirs to those that supplied the polymodal Cougar
Point Tuff. Pyroxene thermometry results obtained using QUILF equilibria yield pre-eruptive magma
temperatures of 905 to 980 °C, and individual modes consistently record higher Ca content and higher
temperatures than pyroxenes with equivalent Fe–Mg ratios in the preceding Cougar Point Tuff. As is the case
with the Cougar Point Tuff, evidence for up-temperature zonation within single crystals that would be
consistent with recycling of sub- or near-solidus material from antecedent magma reservoirs by rapid
reheating is extremely rare. Also, the absence of intra-crystal zonation, particularly at crystal rims, is not
easily reconciled with cannibalization of caldera fill that subsided into pre-eruptive reservoirs. The textural,
compositional and thermometric results rather are consistent with minor re-equilibration to higher
temperatures of the unerupted crystalline residue from the explosive phase of volcanism, or perhaps with
newly generated magmas from source materials very similar to those for the Cougar Point Tuff. Collectively,
the data suggest that most of the pyroxene compositional diversity that is represented by the tuffs and lavas
was produced early in the history of the eruptive center and that compositions across this range were
preserved or duplicated through much of its lifetime. Mineral compositions and thermometry of the multiple
lavas suggest that unerupted magmas residual to the explosive phase of volcanism may have been stored at
sustained, high temperatures subsequent to the explosive phase of volcanism. If so, such persistent high
temperatures and large eruptive magma volumes likewise require an abundant and persistent supply of
basalt magmas to the lower and/or mid-crust, consistent with the tectonic setting of a continental hotspot.
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