Petrology of Hualalai volcano, Hawaii: Implication for mantle composition

Bulletin Volcanologique
By: , and 

Links

Abstract

Hualalai is one of five volcanoes whose eruptions built the island of Hawaii. The historic 1800-1801 flows and the analyzed prehistoric flows exposed at the surface are alkalic basalts except for a trachyte cone and flow at Puu Waawaa and a trachyte maar deposit near Waha Pele. The 1800-1801 eruption produced two flows: the upper Kaupulehu flow and the lower Huehue flow. The analyzed lavas of the two 1800-1801 flows are geochemically identical with the exception of a few samples from the toe of the Huehue flow that appear to be derived from a separate magmatic batch. The analyzed prehistoric basalts are nearly identical to the 1800-1801 flows but include some lavas that have undergone considerable shallow crystal fractionation. The least fractionated alkalic basalts from Hualalai are in equilibrium with mantle olivine (Fo87) indicating that the Hawaiian mantle source region is not unusually iron-rich. The 1800-1801 and analyzed prehistoric basalts can be generated by about 5-10% partial fusion of a garnet-bearing source relatively enriched in the light-rare-earths. The mantle underlying the Hawaiian Islands is chemically and mineralogically heterogeneous before and after extraction of the magmas that make up the volcanoes. 

Study Area

Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Petrology of Hualalai volcano, Hawaii: Implication for mantle composition
Series title Bulletin Volcanologique
DOI 10.1007/BF02600363
Volume 43
Issue 4
Year Published 1980
Language English
Publisher Springer
Description 16 p.
First page 641
Last page 656
Country United States
State Hawaii
Other Geospatial Hualalai volcano
Google Analytic Metrics Metrics page
Additional publication details