Open Access Te Herenga Waka-Victoria University of Wellington
Browse
thesis_access.pdf (378.34 MB)

Post-Oruanui supereruption recovery, reconstruction and evolution of Taupo volcano, New Zealand

Download (378.34 MB)
thesis
posted on 2021-11-14, 11:25 authored by Barker, Simon James

This thesis research presents geochemical perspectives on the magmatic recovery of Taupo volcano (New Zealand) in the aftermath of the 25.4 ka Oruanui supereruption. Following the Oruanui, and after only ~5 kyr of quiescence, Taupo erupted three small volume (~0.1 km3) dacitic units, followed by another ~5 kyr break, and then the modern sequence from ~12 ka onwards of 25 rhyolitic units organised into 3 geochemically distinct subgroups (SG1-SG3). The eruptive units are stratigraphically constrained over exceptionally short time intervals, providing fine-scale temporal snapshots of the magma system. In this thesis I compare and contrast whole-rock, mineral and glass compositions of Oruanui and post-Oruanui magmas through time to investigate the post-supereruption reconstruction and evolution of Taupo through to the latest eruption.  Despite overlapping vent sites and crustal source domains between the Oruanui and post-Oruanui eruptions, U/Th disequilibrium model-ages in zircons from Taupo SG1 rhyolites (erupted 12 ka-10 ka) and SG2 rhyolites (erupted 7 ka-2.6 ka) imply the presence of only minor inheritance of crystals from the Oruanui magma source. Post-Oruanui model-age spectra are instead typically centred close to eruption ages with subordinate older pre-300 ka equiline grains. U-Pb dating of these equiline grains shows that both 300-450 ka plutonic-derived and pre-100 Ma greywacke basement-derived zircons are present. The former largely coincide in age with zircons from the 350 ka Whakamaru eruption products, and are dominant over greywacke in young units which were vented within the published Whakamaru caldera outline. Despite multiple ages and vent sites, trace element compositions are broadly similar in zircons, regardless of their ages. However, a small subset of zircons analysed from SG1 rhyolites have notably high concentrations of U, Th, P, Y+ (REE)3+ and Nb but with only minor changes in Hf and Ti. SG2 zircons typically have higher Sc, reflecting large-scale changes in melt chemistry and crystallising mineral phases with time. The age spectra indicate that most Oruanui zircons were removed by thermally induced dissolution immediately following the supereruption. U-Th ages from individual post-Oruanui eruptions show consistent inheritance of post-Oruanui grains with model ages that centre between the temporally separated but geographically overlapping eruption groups, generating model-age modes. Within the statistical limitations of the isotopic measurements, we interpret these repeated modes to be significant, resulting from incorporation of crystal populations from cyclic post-Oruanui periods of magmatic cooling and crystallisation, acting within a crustal protolith chemically independent of that which built the Oruanui. Cooling periods alternate with times of rejuvenation and eruption, in some cases demonstrably accompanying syn-eruptive regional rifting and mafic injection. Not only were the processes that developed the supersized Oruanui magma body unusually rapid, but this huge magma system was effectively reset and rebuilt on a comparably short timescale.  Major and trace element whole rock, glass and mineral chemistry of post-Oruanui eruptive products indicate how the host magma system re-established and evolved. The dacite units show wide variations in melt inclusion compositions and strongly zoned minerals consistent with interaction of less-evolved mafic magmas at a depths of >8 km, overlapping with the inferred base of the old Oruanui mush system. The dacites reflect the first products of the rebuilding silicic magma system, as most of the Oruanui mush was reconfigured or significantly modified in composition following thermal fluxing accompanying post-caldera collapse readjustment. The first (SG1) rhyolites erupted from 12 ka formed through shallow fractionation (4-5 km depth) and cooling of a parental melt similar in composition to the earlier dacite melts, with overlapping melt inclusion and crystal core compositions between the two magma types. For the younger rhyolite units, fine-scale temporal changes in melt chemistry and mineral phase stability occur over time, which are closely linked to the development, stabilisation and maturation of a new and likely unitary rhyolite mush system at Taupo. The new mush system is closely linked to and sometimes physically interacts with the underlying mafic melts, which are similar in composition to those involved in the Oruanui eruption and provide the long-term thermal and chemical driving force for magmatism. We consider that the new mush body has expanded to >250 km3 (and possibly up to 1000 km3) but has not yet been located by geophysical investigations.  For the most recent SG3 eruptions, the system once again underwent widespread destabilisation, resulting in increased levels of melt extraction from the silicic mush. Trends in whole-rock chemistry and close links between melt inclusions and mineral zoning with earlier units indicates that the 35 km3 Unit Y (Taupo eruption) melt dominant body formed in response to mafic disruption of the silicic mush pile. Associated Fe-Mg diffusion timescales in orthopyroxene suggest that Taupo is capable of changing behaviour and generating large eruptible melt bodies on timescales as short as decades to centuries. The 232 AD Unit Y eruption culminated from a critical combination of high differential tectonic stress build up, and increased potency in the silicic magma system resulting from elevated levels of mafic magma input, resulting in one of the largest and most violent worldwide Holocene eruptions. The post-Y magma system then responded to further disruption with the eruption of sub-lacustrine dome(s). Taupo is considered to be capable of rapidly recovering in its modern form to continue its hyperactive eruptive behaviour on timescales that are of human interest and concern.

History

Copyright Date

2014-01-01

Date of Award

2014-01-01

Publisher

Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington

Rights License

Author Retains Copyright

Degree Discipline

Geology

Degree Grantor

Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington

Degree Level

Doctoral

Degree Name

Doctor of Philosophy

ANZSRC Type Of Activity code

970104 Expanding Knowledge in the Earth Sciences

Victoria University of Wellington Item Type

Awarded Doctoral Thesis

Language

en_NZ

Victoria University of Wellington School

School of Geography, Environment and Earth Sciences

Advisors

Wilson, Colin