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Boiling-over dense pyroclastic density currents during the formation of the similar to 100 km(3) Huichapan ignimbrite in Central Mexico: Stratigraphic and lithofacies analysis
JAIME GABRIEL PACHECO HOYOS
GERARDO DE JESUS AGUIRRE DIAZ
Pablo Dávila Harris
En Embargo
31-01-2020
Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2017.11.007
Ignimbrite
Welding
Boiling-over currents
Sustained eruptions
Pyroclastic currents processes
Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt
"A lithofacies analysis of the Huichapan ignimbrite has been undertaken to evaluate its depositional history from large pyroclastic density currents. The Huichapan ignimbrite is a massive ignimbrite sheet with a maximum runout of at least 55 km and thickness variations between 6 and 80 m. The lower portion of the Huichapan ignimbrite consists of a large plateau [~ 100 km3; 69 km3 as dense-rock equivalent (DRE)] of massive ignimbrites with welding variations from densely welded to partly welded, devitrification, and high-temperature vapor-phase alteration. The lower part grades laterally to moderately welded and non-devitrified ignimbrites. These variations are interpreted as the sedimentation of density-stratified pyroclastic density currents erupted as boiling-over pulses from the Huichapan-Donguinyó caldera complex at a continuous rate, supporting deposition by quasi-steady progressive aggradation of sustained and hot currents. To the north of the caldera, the lower portion of the ignimbrite consists of a small plateau (< 10 km3) in which the densely welded and devitrified lithofacies are absent. Our interpretation is that the pyroclastic density currents flowed late to the north of the caldera and formed a smaller ignimbrite plateau with respect to the western one. This northern ignimbrite plateau cooled faster than the western ignimbrite plateau. Deposition-induced topographic modifications suggest that topographic obstacles, such as remnants of older volcanoes, may have promoted the deviation of the density currents to the north. The upper portion of the ignimbrite is composed of extensive, massive, coarse clast-rich, non-devitrified, and non-welded ignimbrites with abundant fines-poor pipes. This upper part was deposited from largely sustained and rapidly aggrading high-concentration currents in a near end-member, fluid escape-dominated flow boundary zone. The absence of welding in the upper portion may record pyroclastic density currents cooling during the formation of a relatively high pyroclastic fountain at the vent. We have established a depositional model for the Huichapan ignimbrite that explains the differences between the western and northern plateaus. The Huichapan ignimbrite was formed during a large caldera-forming eruption with concentrated pyroclastic fountains. High mass-flow rate was maintained for long periods, promoting the mobility of the pyroclastic density currents."
Elsevier
2018
Artículo
Jaime G. Pacheco-Hoyos, Gerardo J. Aguirre-Díaz, Pablo Dávila-Harris, Boiling-over dense pyroclastic density currents during the formation of the ~100km3 Huichapan ignimbrite in Central Mexico: Stratigraphic and lithofacies analysis, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, Volume 349, 2018, Pages 268-282.
GEOLOGÍA
Versión aceptada
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