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Compound maar crater and co-eruptive scoria cone in the Lunar Crater Volcanic Field (Nevada, USA)

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14 Scopus citations

Abstract

Bea's Crater (Lunar Crater Volcanic Field, Nevada, USA) consists of two coalesced maar craters with diameters of ~ 440 m and ~ 1050 m, combined with a co-eruptive scoria cone that straddles the northeast rim of the larger crater. The two craters and the cone form an alignment that parallels many local and regional structures such as normal faults, and is interpreted to represent the orientation of the feeder dyke near the surface. The maar formed among a dense cluster of scoria cones; the cone-cluster topography resulted in crater rim that has a variable elevation. These older cones are composed of variably welded agglomerate and scoria with differing competence that subsequently affected the shape of Bea's Crater. Tephra ring deposits associated with phreatomagmatic maar-forming eruptions are rich in basaltic lithics derived from < 250 m depth, with variable contents of deeper-seated ignimbrite lithic clasts, consistent with ejection from relatively shallow explosions although a diatreme might extend to deeper levels beneath the maar. Interbedding of deposits on the northeastern cone and in the tephra ring record variations in the magmatic volatile driven and phreatomagmatic eruption styles in both space and time along a feeder dike.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)41-51
Number of pages11
JournalJournal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research
Volume339
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 1 2017

Keywords

  • Diatreme
  • Hawaiian eruption
  • Maar
  • Monogenetic
  • Scoria cone
  • Strombolian eruption

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