Experimental and thermodynamic constraints on the magmatic variables governing pre-eruptive conditions at Hunga volcano: Development of a new equilibrium orthopyroxene-clinopyroxene thermometer
Califano E., Mollo S., Brenna M., Pontesilli A., Wu J., Marks P., Eul D., Nowak M., Cronin S.J., Di Fiore F., Vona A., Abeykoon S., Di Genova D., Romano C., Scarlato P.
Abstract
The cataclysmic eruption of Hunga volcano (Tonga-Kermadec arc system) on 15 January 2022, the most powerful explosive volcanic event of the 21st century, underscores the critical need to constrain the pre-eruptive magmatic conditions governing arc volcanoes with shallow marine calderas. In this study, we present results from isobaric-isothermal crystallization experiments conducted on a basaltic andesite representative of primitive magmas at Hunga volcano. Experimental runs were performed at pressures of 200 and 300 MPa, over a temperature range of 1000–1130 °C, melt water contents of 0.6–6.4 wt%, and oxygen fugacities between +0.7 and + 3.4 log units relative to the nickel?nickel oxide buffer. Temperature and melt-water content are the primary controls on modal phase assemblages and compositional trends in the experimental charges, exerting a dominant influence on the cotectic crystallization of clinopyroxene and plagioclase, as well as on the stability of orthopyroxene and abundance of magnetite. By integrating experimental data with thermodynamic modeling, orthopyroxene-clinopyroxene thermometry, and plagioclase-based hygrometry, we document that both pre-2022 and 2022 eruptive products at Hunga volcano reflect the differentiation of basaltic andesitic to andesitic magmas at pre-eruptive temperatures of ?1050–1130 °C and melt-water contents up to ?3 wt%. Under the investigated experimental conditions, however, extensive crystallization of plagioclase and magnetite at ?1000 °C drives the host basaltic andesitic melt toward more evolved dacitic compositions. Dacites have not been reported at Hunga volcano, but they occur in low-temperature, magnetite-bearing phenocryst assemblages on other Tongan islands, particularly in the northern part of the arc. Collectively, our experimental-thermodynamic approach provides compelling evidence for polythermal and polybaric plumbing systems at intra-oceanic arc volcanoes, highlighting the pivotal role of phase stability and mineral chemistry in controlling the differentiation pathways of magmas and the transition from tholeiitic to calc-alkaline affinity.