Erosion by flowing lava: geochemical evidence in the Cave Basalt, Mount St. Helens, Washington

被引:0
|
作者
David A. Williams
Steven D. Kadel
Ronald Greeley
C. Michael Lesher
Michael A. Clynne
机构
[1] Arizona State University,Department of Geological Sciences
[2] Laurentian University,Mineral Exploration Research Centre, Department of Earth Sciences
[3] United States Geological Survey,Department of Geological Sciences
[4] Arizona State University,undefined
来源
Bulletin of Volcanology | 2004年 / 66卷
关键词
Pyroclastic Flow; Mechanical Erosion; Basaltic Lava; Basalt Flow; Lava Tube;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
We sampled basaltic lava flows and underlying dacitic tuff deposits in or near lava tubes of the Cave Basalt, Mount St. Helens, Washington to determine whether the Cave Basalt lavas contain geochemical evidence of substrate contamination by lava erosion. The samples were analyzed using a combination of wavelength-dispersive X-ray fluorescence spectrometry and inductively-coupled plasma mass spectrometry. The results indicate that the oldest, outer lava tube linings in direct contact with the dacitic substrate are contaminated, whereas the younger, inner lava tube linings are uncontaminated and apparently either more evolved or enriched in residual liquid. The most heavily contaminated lavas occur closer to the vent and in steeper parts of the tube system, and the amount of contamination decreases with increasing distance downstream. These results suggest that erosion by lava and contamination were limited to only the initially emplaced flows and that erosion was localized and enhanced by vigorous laminar flow over steeper slopes. After cooling, the initial Cave Basalt lava flows formed an insulating lining within the tubes that prevented further erosion by later flows. This interpretation is consistent with models of lava erosion that predict higher erosion rates closer to sources and over steeper slopes. A greater abundance of xenoliths and xenocrysts relative to xenomelts in hand samples indicates that mechanical erosion rather than thermal erosion was the dominant erosional process in the Cave Basalt, but further sampling and petrographic analyses must be performed to verify this hypothesis.
引用
收藏
页码:168 / 181
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Erosion by flowing lava: geochemical evidence in the Cave Basalt, Mount St. Helens, Washington
    Williams, DA
    Kadel, SD
    Greeley, R
    Lesher, CM
    Clynne, MA
    BULLETIN OF VOLCANOLOGY, 2004, 66 (02) : 168 - 181
  • [2] LAVA TUBES OF CAVE BASALT, MOUNT-ST-HELENS, WASHINGTON
    GREELEY, R
    HYDE, JH
    GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA BULLETIN, 1972, 83 (08) : 2397 - &
  • [3] Thermal erosion of felsic ground by the laminar flow of a basaltic lava, with application to the Cave Basalt, Mount St. Helens, Washington
    Kerr, Ross C.
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-SOLID EARTH, 2009, 114
  • [4] Plant succession on pumice at Mount St. Helens, Washington
    Del Moral, R
    AMERICAN MIDLAND NATURALIST, 1999, 141 (01): : 101 - 114
  • [5] ONGOING GENESIS OF A NOVEL GLACIOVOLCANIC CAVE SYSTEM IN THE CRATER OF MOUNT ST. HELENS, WASHINGTON, USA
    Sobolewski, Linda
    Stenner, Christian
    Hueser, Charlotte
    Berghaus, Tobias
    Cartaya, Eduardo
    Pflitsch, Andreas
    JOURNAL OF CAVE AND KARST STUDIES, 2022, 84 (02) : 51 - 65
  • [6] Mount St. Helens
    Benjamin, Elisabeth
    NEW ORLEANS REVIEW, 2008, 34 (01): : 88 - 88
  • [7] Inventory of the vascular flora of Mount St. Helens' crater, Washington
    Titus, Jonathan H.
    NORTHWEST SCIENCE, 2008, 82 (01) : 76 - 81
  • [8] Primary succession trajectories on pumice at Mount St. Helens, Washington
    del Moral, Roger
    Thomason, Lindsay A.
    Wenke, Anthony C.
    Lozanoff, Natasha
    Abata, Mario D.
    JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE, 2012, 23 (01) : 73 - 85
  • [9] Geochemical precursors to volcanic activity at Mount St. Helens, USA
    Berlo, K
    Blundy, J
    Turner, S
    Cashman, K
    Hawkesworth, C
    Black, S
    SCIENCE, 2004, 306 (5699) : 1167 - 1169
  • [10] Mount St. Helens at 40
    Major, Jon J.
    SCIENCE, 2020, 368 (6492) : 704 - 705