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Creators/Authors contains: "Houghton, Bruce F"

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  1. Free, publicly-accessible full text available July 1, 2026
  2. Free, publicly-accessible full text available June 1, 2026
  3. We use new geochemical, petrological, and rheological data to constrain the formation and emplacement of the highly compositionally unusual(andesitic basalt) Kīlauea 2018 Fissure 17 (F17) eruptive products. Despite the restricted spatial and temporal distribution, F17 samples are texturally and geochemically diverse. The western samples are enriched in SiO2 by up to 10 wt%, relative to their eastern equivalents; additionally, the western samples contain microcrystalline enclaves, absent from the homogenous eastern samples. The compositions erupted along F17 suggest interaction between the basaltic 2018 juvenile magma and a crystal mush at depth, likely a left-over from the nearby 1955 eruption. Magma mingling caused heating and local melting of remnant mush, leading to melt hybridization and volatile exsolution. Rapid water exsolution likely caused overpressurization of the reservoir underneath the western side of F17, leading to Strombolian explosions of viscous magma, in contrast to sustained Hawaiian fountaining on the eastern side. Remelting of remnant crystal mush and melt hybridization in open-conduit systems may hence be an effective mechanism in inducing volatile saturation. 
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  4. Magma mingling and mixing are common processes at basaltic volcanoes and play a fundamental role in magma petrogenesis and eruption dynamics. Mingling occurs most commonly when hot primitive magma is introduced into cooler magma. Here, we investigate a scenario whereby cool, partially degassed lava is drained back into a conduit, where it mingles with hotter, less degassed magma. The 1959 eruption of Kīlauea Iki, Hawaiʻi involved 16 high fountaining episodes. During each episode, fountains fed a lava lake in a pit crater, which then partially drained back into the conduit during and after each episode. We infer highly crystalline tachylite inclusions and streaks in the erupted crystal-poor scoria to be the result of the recycling of this drain-back lava. The crystal phases present are dendrites of plagioclase, augite and magnetite/ilmenite, at sizes of up to 10 μm. Host sideromelane glass contains 7–8 wt% MgO and the tachylite glass (up to 0.5% by area) contains 2.5–6 wt% MgO. The vesicle population in the tachylite is depleted in the smallest size classes (< 0.5 mm) and has overall lower vesicle number densities and a higher degree of vesicle coalescence than the sideromelane component. The tachylite exhibits increasingly complex ‘stretching and folding’ mingling textures through the episodes, with discrete blocky tachylite inclusions in episodes 1 and 3 giving way to complex, folded, thin filaments of tachylite in pyroclasts erupted in episodes 15 and 16. We calculate that a lava lake crust 8–35 cm thick may have formed in the repose times between episodes, and then foundered and been entrained into the conduit during drain-back. The recycled fragments of crust would have been reheated in the conduit, inducing glass devitrification and crystallisation of pyroxene, magnetite and plagioclase dendrites and eventually undergoing ductile flow as the temperature of the fragments approached the host magma temperature. We use simple models of magma mingling to establish that stretching and folding of recycled, ductile lava could involve thinning of the clasts by up to a factor of 10 during the timescale of the eruption, consistent with observations of streaks and filaments of tachylite erupted during episodes 15 and 16, which may have undergone multiple cycles of eruption, drain-back and reheating. 
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  5. Abstract The 2018 eruption on the lower East Rift Zone, Hawaii, involved the opening of 24 fissures before the eruption focussed on a single point source, fissure 8 (F8). This study characterises the preserved medial F8 tephra deposit using an isopach map, maximum clast size data, and total grain size distribution analysis, shedding light on the tephra transport and dispersal mechanisms beyond the F8 cone occurring during the fountaining. The medial sheet-like deposit covers approximately 0.22 km2, best fit by a Power-Law thinning rate. The TephraFits model estimated the corresponding volume of the continuous medial tephra blanket to be ~ 2$$\times$$ × 104m3, just 0.02% of the total volume erupted from fissure 8. Samples from the preserved medial deposit have grain size modes of − 3.5 to − 4 Φ, compatible with Voronoi tessellation calculations. Maximum clast size did not show a ‘typical’ fining relationship with distance from the vent; instead, it shows no clear pattern. One factor was that the extremely low clast density, a function of a secondary vesiculation event, enabled the pyroclasts to be re-entrained, often repeatedly, by large eddies downwind of the vent. This should be considered in future studies of prolonged fountaining episodes as the clasts involved in the medial fall are rarely well preserved in the geologic record due to their fragile nature but their presence adds complexity to the inferred eruption dynamics. 
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