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Quantifying Microstructural Evolution in Moving Magma

Authors :
Katherine J. Dobson
Anja Allabar
Eloise Bretagne
Jason Coumans
Mike Cassidy
Corrado Cimarelli
Rebecca Coats
Thomas Connolley
Loic Courtois
Donald B. Dingwell
Danilo Di Genova
Benjamin Fernando
Julie L. Fife
Frey Fyfe
Stephan Gehne
Thomas Jones
Jackie E. Kendrick
Helen Kinvig
Stephan Kolzenburg
Yan Lavallée
Emma Liu
Edward W. Llewellin
Amber Madden-Nadeau
Kamel Madi
Federica Marone
Cerith Morgan
Julie Oppenheimer
Anna Ploszajski
Gavin Reid
Jenny Schauroth
Christian M. Schlepütz
Catriona Sellick
Jérémie Vasseur
Felix W. von Aulock
Fabian B. Wadsworth
Sebastian Wiesmaier
Kaz Wanelik
Source :
Frontiers in Earth Science, Vol 8 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Frontiers Media S.A., 2020.

Abstract

Many of the grand challenges in volcanic and magmatic research are focused on understanding the dynamics of highly heterogeneous systems and the critical conditions that enable magmas to move or eruptions to initiate. From the formation and development of magma reservoirs, through propagation and arrest of magma, to the conditions in the conduit, gas escape, eruption dynamics, and beyond into the environmental impacts of that eruption, we are trying to define how processes occur, their rates and timings, and their causes and consequences. However, we are usually unable to observe the processes directly. Here we give a short synopsis of the new capabilities and highlight the potential insights that in situ observation can provide. We present the XRheo and Pele furnace experimental apparatus and analytical toolkit for the in situ X-ray tomography-based quantification of magmatic microstructural evolution during rheological testing. We present the first 3D data showing the evolving textural heterogeneity within a shearing magma, highlighting the dynamic changes to microstructure that occur from the initiation of shear, and the variability of the microstructural response to that shear as deformation progresses. The particular shear experiments highlighted here focus on the effect of shear on bubble coalescence with a view to shedding light on both magma transport and fragmentation processes. The XRheo system is intended to help us understand the microstructural controls on the complex and non-Newtonian evolution of magma rheology, and is therefore used to elucidate the many mobilization, transport, and eruption phenomena controlled by the rheological evolution of a multi-phase magmatic flows. The detailed, in situ characterization of sample textures presented here therefore represents the opening of a new field for the accurate parameterization of dynamic microstructural control on rheological behavior.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22966463
Volume :
8
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Frontiers in Earth Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.387f1d7972d440d8cf174b0259a5175
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/feart.2020.00287