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Detailed Reference Information |
Trua, T., Serri, G., Marani, M., Renzulli, A. and Gamberi, F. (2002). Volcanological and petrological evolution of Marsili Seamount (southern Tyrrhenian Sea). Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research 114(3-4): 441-464. |
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A swath bathymetric survey was conducted on Marsili Volcano, the biggest seamount in the Tyrrhenian Sea. It stands 3000 m above the surrounding oceanic crust of the 3500 m-deep Marsili back-arc basin and is axially located within the basin. The seamount has an elongated shape and presents distinctive morphology, with narrow (<1000 m) ridges, made up of several elongated cones, on the summit zone and extensive cone fields on its lower flanks. A dredging campaign carried out at water depths varying between 3400 and 600 m indicates that most of Marsili Seamount is composed of medium-K calc-alkaline basalts. Evolved high-K andesites were only recovered from the small cones on the summit axis zone. Petrological and geochemical characteristics of the least differentiated basalts reveal that at least two varieties of magmas have been erupted on the Marsili Volcano. Group 1 basalts have plagioclase and olivine as dominant phases and show lower Al, Ca, K, Ba, Rb and Sr, and higher Fe, Na, Ti and Zr with respect to a second type of basaltic magma. Group 2 basalts reveal the presence of clinopyroxene as an additional phenocryst phase. In addition, the two basaltic magmas have different original pre-eruptive H (sub 2) O content (group 1, H (sub 2) O-poor and group 2, H (sub 2) O-rich). Moreover, comparison of the compositional trends and mineralogical compositions obtained from MELTS [Ghiorso, M. S., Sack, R. O., Contrib. Mineral. Petrol. 119 (1995) 197-212] fractional crystallization calculations reveal that the evolved andesites can only exclusively be derived from a low-pressure (0.3 kbar) fractionation of magmas compositionally similar to the least evolved group 2 basalts. Finally, we suggest that the high vesicularity of the basalts sampled at relatively great depths (>2400 m) on the edifice is governed by H (sub 2) O and, probably, CO (sub 2) exsolution and is not a feature indicative of shallow water depth eruption. |
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BACKGROUND DATA FILES |
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Petrography & Mineral Chemistry |
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Major & Trace Elements |
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Keywords
basalts, bathymetry, fractional crystallization, geochemistry, igneous, rocks, magmas, Marsili Seamount, Mediterranean Sea, mineral, assemblages, ocean floors, petrography, seamounts, Tyrrhenian Sea, volcanic rocks, volcanism, volcanoes, West Mediterranean, 05A, Igneous and metamorphic petrology |
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Publisher
Elsevier Science P.O. Box 211 1000 AE Amsterdam The Netherlands (+31) 20 485 3757 (+31) 20 485 3432 nlinfo-f@elsevier.com |
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