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JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH,
VOL. 101, NO. B5,
PAGES 11,701–11,713,
1996
Petrography and olivine and glass chemistry of lavas from the Hawaii Scientific Drilling Project
Michael O. Garcia
Hawaii Center for Volcanology, Department of Geology and Geophysics University of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu
Abstract
Many of the lavas from the Hawaii Scientific Drilling Project (HSDP) are olivine-rich (>10 vol %) and weakly altered. The
Manna Loa lavas from the upper part of the HSDP hole are more olivine-rich and generally have olivines with higher forsterite
contents than the underlying Mauna Kea lavas. Olivine-rich lavas from these volcanoes contain both euhedral, undeformed phenocrysts
and kink-banded xenocrysts of olivines, unlike what was assumed for typical subaerial Hawaiian tholeiites. The forsterite
content of both types of olivine ranges widely (80–90%). Many of the HSDP lavas have olivines with forsterite contents of
89–90%, indicating that they grew in magmas with at least 15 wt % MgO. Most of these lavas contain even higher MgO contents
(18 to 28 wt %), which are a result of accumulation of olivine phenocrysts and xenocrysts. The olivine xenocrysts in these
lavas are inferred to be derived from disaggregation of deformed dunite cumulates, which are present in many of these lavas.
Glasses from pahoehoe crusts on some of the HSDP flows have major element compositions that confirm the subdivision of the
core based on whole rock compositions. The moderately evolved compositions of the HSDP glasses indicate quenching temperatures
similar to those measured during the current Kilauea eruption.
Received 8
May
1995;
accepted 19
December
1995.
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Citation: Garcia, M. O.
(1996),
Petrography and olivine and glass chemistry of lavas from the Hawaii Scientific Drilling Project,
J. Geophys. Res.,
101(B5),
11,701–11,713.
Copyright 1996 by the American Geophysical Union.
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