How do volatiles escape their shallow magmatic hearth?

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Abstract

Only a small fraction (approx. 1-20%) of magmas generated in the mantle erupt at the surface. While volcanic eruptions are typically considered as the main exhaust pipes for volatile elements to escape into the atmosphere, the contribution of magma reservoirs crystallizing in the crust is likely to dominate the volatile transfer from depth to the surface. Here, we use multiscale physical modelling to identify and quantify the main mechanisms of gas escape from crystallizing magma bodies. We show that most of the outgassing occurs at intermediate to high crystal fraction, when the system has reached a mature mush state. It is particularly true for shallow volatile-rich systems that tend to exsolve volatiles through second boiling, leading to efficient construction of gas channels as soon as the crystallinity reaches approximately 40-50 vol.%. We, therefore, argue that estimates of volatile budgets based on volcanic activity may be misleading because they tend to significantly underestimate the magmatic volatile flux and can provide biased volatile compositions. Recognition of the compositional signature and volumetric dominance of intrusive outgassing is, therefore, necessary to build robust models of volatile recycling between the mantle and the surface.

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Degruyter, W., Parmigiani, A., Huber, C., & Bachmann, O. (2019). How do volatiles escape their shallow magmatic hearth? Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences, 377(2139). https://doi.org/10.1098/rsta.2018.0017

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