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Creators/Authors contains: "Bartley, John M."

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  1. Ian Carmichael wrote of an “andesite aqueduct” that conveys vast amounts of water from the magma source region of a subduction zone to the Earth’s surface. Diverse observations indicate that subduction zone magmas contain 5 wt % or more H2O. Most of the water is released from crystallizing intrusions to play a central role in contact metamorphism and the genesis of ore deposits, but it also has important effects on the plutonic rocks themselves. Many plutons were constructed incrementally from the top down over million-year time scales. Early-formed increments are wall rocks to later increments; heat and water released as each increment crystallizes pass through older increments before exiting the pluton. The water ascends via multiple pathways. Hydrothermal veins record ascent via fracture conduits. Pipe-like conduits in Yosemite National Park, California, are located in or near aplite–pegmatite dikes, which themselves are products of hydrous late-stage magmatic liquids. Pervasive grain-boundary infiltration is recorded by fluid-mediated subsolidus modification of mineral compositions and textures. The flood of magmatic water carries a large fraction of the total thermal energy of the magma and transmits that energy much more rapidly than conduction, thus enhancing the fluctuating postemplacement thermal histories that result from incremental pluton growth. The effects of water released by subduction zone magmas are central not only to metamorphism and mineralization of surrounding rocks, but also to the petrology and the thermal history of the plutons themselves. 
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  2. Magmatic and hydrothermal systems are intimately linked, significantly overlapping through time but persisting in different parts of a system. New preliminary U-Pb and trace element petrochronology from zircon and titanite demonstrate the protracted and episodic record of magmatic and hydrothermal processes in the Alta stock–Little Cottonwood stock plutonic and volcanic system. This system spans the upper ~11.5 km of the crust and includes a large composite pluton (e.g., Little Cottonwood stock), dike-like conduit (e.g., Alta stock), and surficial volcanic edifices (East Traverse and Park City volcanic units). A temperature–time path for the system was constructed using U-Pb and tetravalent cation thermometry to establish a record of >10 Myr of pluton emplacement, magma transport, volcanic eruption, and coeval hydrothermal circulation. Zircons from the Alta and Little Cottonwood stocks recorded a single population of apparent temperatures of ~625 ± 35 °C, while titanite apparent temperatures formed two distinct populations interpreted as magmatic (~725 ± 50 °C) and hydrothermal (~575 ± 50 °C). The spatial and temporal variations required episodic magma input, which overlapped in time with hydrothermal fluid flow in the structurally higher portions of the system. The hydrothermal system was itself episodic and migrated within the margin of the Alta stock and its aureole through time, and eventually focused at the contact of the Alta stock. First-order estimates of magma flux in this system suggest that the volcanic flux was 2–5× higher than the intrusive magma accumulation rate throughout its lifespan, consistent with intrusive volcanic systems around the world. 
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