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Experimental modelling of shallow magma emplacement: Application to saucer-shaped intrusions
Authors:Olivier Galland  Sverre Planke  Else-Ragnhild Neumann  Anders Malthe-Sørenssen
Institution:1. Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum GFZ, Section 2.1, Potsdam, Germany;2. Institute of Geophysics, University of Hamburg, Germany;3. Earthquake Research Institute, University of Tokyo, Japan;4. Earth Observatory of Singapore, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore;5. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA;6. Department of Chemical and Petroleum Engineering, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA;7. Department of Earth Science, University of Oxford, United Kingdom
Abstract:Saucer-shaped dolerite and sandstone intrusions are common in sedimentary basins world-wide. We have conducted a series of scaled experiments simulating the process of magma emplacement in sedimentary basins, with particular attention on the formation of saucer-shaped sills. The model materials were (1) cohesive fine-grained silica flour, representing brittle crust; and (2) molten low-viscosity oil, representing magma. The experiments were performed in both homogeneous and layered models. In all the experiments, oil injection resulted in doming of the surface. In the homogeneous models, the injected oil formed cone sheets and sub-vertical dykes. Cone sheets formed for shallow injection (1–3 cm), and vertical dykes formed for deeper injection (4–5 cm). In layered models, the injected oil always formed saucer-shaped intrusions. Our experimental results show that (1) sill intrusion results in the formation of a dome, with melt erupting at the rim; (2) layering controls the formation of sills and saucer-shaped sills; (3) saucer-shaped sills are fed from the bottom and the fluid flows upward and outward; and (4) the diameter of saucer-shaped sills increase with increasing emplacement depth. The systematic relation between domes and sills and the depth-dependence of sill diameters show that saucer-shaped intrusions result from the interaction between a growing flat-lying shallow sill and doming of the free surface. We conclude that saucer-shaped intrusions represent fundamental geometries formed by shallow magma intrusion in stratified basins.
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