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Detailed Reference Information |
Jackson, E.D. and Wright, T.L. (1970). Xenoliths in the Honolulu volcanic series, Hawaii. Journal of Petrology 11(2): 405-430. |
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The Pleistocene to Holocene Honolulu Volcanic Series was erupted from about 37 vents scattered over the older Koolau tholeiite shield. The rocks of this series are compositionally zoned with respect to the shield; near the Koolau caldera the predominant rocks are melilite-nepheline basalts, but these give way outward to nepheline basalts, and ultimately, at the apron of the shield, to alkalic olivine basalts. The xenoliths in these are likewise zoned: most of those in the caldera area consist of dunite, most of those at intermediate distances of lherzolite, and some of those in the apron of the shield consist of garnet pyroxenite and peridotite. The zoning of the xenoliths, however, does not coincide with that of the enclosing rocks. We believe that copious eruption of Koolau tholeiite produced a lateral and vertical heterogeneity in the mantle beneath Oahu, and that the zoning in both Honolulu lavas and their xenoliths is caused by that heterogeneity. The textures of the xenoliths indicate that the basalts were mainly produced by fractional melting rather than fractional crystallization. There is some evidence that the dunite xenoliths are mantle residua produced during the generation of the tholeiite, and that the Honolulu magmas were generated at greater depths than the Koolau magmas, probably as a result of elastic unloading. |
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Keywords
basalts; East Pacific Ocean Islands; genesis; Hawaii; Honolulu, volcanic series; igneous rocks; inclusions; magmas; Oceania;, petrology; Polynesia; United States; volcanic rocks; xenoliths, 05, Igneous and metamorphic petrology |
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Publisher
Oxford University Press Great Clarendon Street Oxford OX2 6DP U.K. +44-(0)-1865-267907 +44-(0)-1865-267485 jnl.info@oup.co.uk |
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