Textural evidence for high-grade ignimbrites formed by low-explosivity eruptions, Parana Magmatic Province, southern Brazil
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2018-04-15
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Elsevier B.V.
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The Parana-Etendeka Province is a Lower Cretaceous huge bimodal tholeiitic volcanic province (1 million.km(3)) that predated the Gondwana breakup. Its silicic portion makes up a total volume of at least 20,000 km(3) and in southern Brazil it comprises the Chapeco porphyritic high-Ti trachydacites-dacites and the Palmas microporphyritic-aphyric low-Ti dacites-rhyolites. The widespread silicic sheets are debated in the literature because they bear similarities between lavas and high grade ignimbrites. Here we provide new observations and interpretations for flow units with large, dark, and vesicle-poor lens-shaped blobs surrounded by a light-colored matrix. The textural features (macro- to micro-scale) of these blobs are different from typical pumice and/or fiamme and support a low explosivity pyroclastic origin, possibly low-column fountain eruptions with discharge rates high enough to produce laterally extensive high-grade ignimbrites. Such an interpretation, combined with a conspicuous absence of lithic fragments in the deposits, is aligned with a lack of identified calderas in the Parana-Etendeka Province. Maximum timescales of crystallization associated with the juvenile blobs and estimated from CSD slopes are on the order of millennia for phenocryst populations and on the order of decades for microphenocryst populations. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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Journal Of Volcanology And Geothermal Research. Amsterdam: Elsevier Science Bv, v. 355, p. 87-97, 2018.