Magma chamber growth models in the upper crust: A review of the hydraulic and inertial constraints

Finite volumes of magma moving in confinement, store hydraulic potential energy for the generation, control and transmission of power. The Pascal's principle in a hydraulic jack arrangement is used to model the vertical and lateral growth of sills. The small input piston of the hydraulic jack i...

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Main Authors: Eugenio Aragón, Fernando J. D´Eramo, Lucio P. Pinotti, Manuel Demartis, José María Tubía, Roberto F. Weinberg, Jorge E. Coniglio
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-05-01
Series:Geoscience Frontiers
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S167498711830210X
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spelling doaj-b92af942de5d42a6a98ae8385f980a7e2020-11-24T21:26:42ZengElsevierGeoscience Frontiers1674-98712019-05-0110312111218Magma chamber growth models in the upper crust: A review of the hydraulic and inertial constraintsEugenio Aragón0Fernando J. D´Eramo1Lucio P. Pinotti2Manuel Demartis3José María Tubía4Roberto F. Weinberg5Jorge E. Coniglio6Centro de Investigaciones Geológicas (CONICET – Universidad Nacional de La Plata), Diagonal 113 N° 275, CP B1904DPK La Plata, Argentina; Corresponding author.Universidad Nacional de Río Cuarto, CONICET, Departamento de Geología (Ruta Nac. N° 36 Km 601), Río Cuarto, ArgentinaUniversidad Nacional de Río Cuarto, CONICET, Departamento de Geología (Ruta Nac. N° 36 Km 601), Río Cuarto, ArgentinaUniversidad Nacional de Río Cuarto, CONICET, Departamento de Geología (Ruta Nac. N° 36 Km 601), Río Cuarto, ArgentinaDepartamento de Geodinámica, Universidad del País Vasco (UPV/EHU), Apartado 644, Bilbao, SpainSchool of Earth, Atmosphere and Environment, Monash University, Clayton, VIC 3800, AustraliaUniversidad Nacional de Río Cuarto, CONICET, Departamento de Geología (Ruta Nac. N° 36 Km 601), Río Cuarto, ArgentinaFinite volumes of magma moving in confinement, store hydraulic potential energy for the generation, control and transmission of power. The Pascal's principle in a hydraulic jack arrangement is used to model the vertical and lateral growth of sills. The small input piston of the hydraulic jack is equivalent to the feeder dike, the upper large expansible piston equivalent to the magmatic chamber and the inertial force of the magma in the dike is the input force. This arrangement is particularly relevant to the case of sills expanding with blunt tips, for which rapid fracture propagation is inhibited. Hydraulic models concur with experimental data that show that lateral expansion of magma into a sill is promoted when the vertical ascent of magma through a feeder dike reaches the bottom contact with an overlying, flat rigid-layer. At this point, the magma is forced to decelerate, triggering a pressure wave through the conduit caused by the continued ascent of magma further down (fluid-hammer effect). This pressure wave can provide overpressure enough to trigger the initial hydraulic lateral expansion of magma into an incipient sill, and still have enough input inertial force left to continue feeding the hydraulic system. The lateral expansion underneath the strong impeding layer, causes an area increase and thus, further hydraulic amplification of the input inertial force on the sides and roof of the incipient sill, triggering further expansion in a self-reinforcing process. Initially, the lateral pressure increase is larger than that in the roof allowing the sill to expand. However, expansion eventually increases the total integrated force on the roof allowing its uplift into either a laccolith, if the roof preserves continuity, or into a piston bounded by a circular set of fractures. Hydraulic models for shallow magmatic chambers, also suggest that laccolith-like intrusions require the existence of a self-supported chamber roof. In contrast, if the roof of magmatic chambers loses the self-supporting capacity, lopoliths and calderas should be expected for more or less dense magmas, respectively, owing to the growing influence of the density contrast between the host rock and the magma. Keywords: Pascal's principle, Geologic hydraulic jack, Emplacement, Sills growth, Fluid hammerhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S167498711830210X
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eugenio Aragón
Fernando J. D´Eramo
Lucio P. Pinotti
Manuel Demartis
José María Tubía
Roberto F. Weinberg
Jorge E. Coniglio
spellingShingle Eugenio Aragón
Fernando J. D´Eramo
Lucio P. Pinotti
Manuel Demartis
José María Tubía
Roberto F. Weinberg
Jorge E. Coniglio
Magma chamber growth models in the upper crust: A review of the hydraulic and inertial constraints
Geoscience Frontiers
author_facet Eugenio Aragón
Fernando J. D´Eramo
Lucio P. Pinotti
Manuel Demartis
José María Tubía
Roberto F. Weinberg
Jorge E. Coniglio
author_sort Eugenio Aragón
title Magma chamber growth models in the upper crust: A review of the hydraulic and inertial constraints
title_short Magma chamber growth models in the upper crust: A review of the hydraulic and inertial constraints
title_full Magma chamber growth models in the upper crust: A review of the hydraulic and inertial constraints
title_fullStr Magma chamber growth models in the upper crust: A review of the hydraulic and inertial constraints
title_full_unstemmed Magma chamber growth models in the upper crust: A review of the hydraulic and inertial constraints
title_sort magma chamber growth models in the upper crust: a review of the hydraulic and inertial constraints
publisher Elsevier
series Geoscience Frontiers
issn 1674-9871
publishDate 2019-05-01
description Finite volumes of magma moving in confinement, store hydraulic potential energy for the generation, control and transmission of power. The Pascal's principle in a hydraulic jack arrangement is used to model the vertical and lateral growth of sills. The small input piston of the hydraulic jack is equivalent to the feeder dike, the upper large expansible piston equivalent to the magmatic chamber and the inertial force of the magma in the dike is the input force. This arrangement is particularly relevant to the case of sills expanding with blunt tips, for which rapid fracture propagation is inhibited. Hydraulic models concur with experimental data that show that lateral expansion of magma into a sill is promoted when the vertical ascent of magma through a feeder dike reaches the bottom contact with an overlying, flat rigid-layer. At this point, the magma is forced to decelerate, triggering a pressure wave through the conduit caused by the continued ascent of magma further down (fluid-hammer effect). This pressure wave can provide overpressure enough to trigger the initial hydraulic lateral expansion of magma into an incipient sill, and still have enough input inertial force left to continue feeding the hydraulic system. The lateral expansion underneath the strong impeding layer, causes an area increase and thus, further hydraulic amplification of the input inertial force on the sides and roof of the incipient sill, triggering further expansion in a self-reinforcing process. Initially, the lateral pressure increase is larger than that in the roof allowing the sill to expand. However, expansion eventually increases the total integrated force on the roof allowing its uplift into either a laccolith, if the roof preserves continuity, or into a piston bounded by a circular set of fractures. Hydraulic models for shallow magmatic chambers, also suggest that laccolith-like intrusions require the existence of a self-supported chamber roof. In contrast, if the roof of magmatic chambers loses the self-supporting capacity, lopoliths and calderas should be expected for more or less dense magmas, respectively, owing to the growing influence of the density contrast between the host rock and the magma. Keywords: Pascal's principle, Geologic hydraulic jack, Emplacement, Sills growth, Fluid hammer
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S167498711830210X
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