B. F. HOUGHTON
Abstract K-Trig basalts form a NNE lineament of four monogenetic centres, along the eastern side of the Kaiapo Fault, 4 km west of Taupo, New Zealand. Exposures of the northernmost centres (Punatekahi and K-Trig) are dominated by strombolian volcanism, whereas the southern centres (Kaiapo and Mine Bay) are products of surtseyan activity.
The Kaiapo deposit represents the faulted, eroded remnant of a once larger phreatomagmatic tuff cone. Inner-wall stratigraphy exposed in the Kaiapo Fault scarp shows the deposit built up during three phases of phreatomagmatic volcanism, each phase comprising a lapilli-rich lower facies A and a contrasting lapilli-poor upper facies B. Both are interpreted as the product of multiple "wet" surges, but facies A beds are classic surtseyan products, whereas facies B beds are interpreted as having been deposited during periods of lower magma flux, when decoupled magmatic volatiles streamed through a fine-grained vent slurry, facilitating weak steam explosions.
At Punatekahi, two coalescing scoria cones were formed by "dry" (strombolian) eruptions, generated when large gas bubbles rose and burst through a lava pond formed within the cone. Grainsize and vesicularity data from one of the cones indicates that discharge rate was generally low, allowing a dense crust to form on the surface of the ponded lava. Occasionally the crust was removed by explosive fragmentation allowing eruption of only actively vesiculating magma.
At K-Trig, between T-Trig and Punatekahi, volcanism progressed from initial phreatomagmatic activity to strombolian activity as vent conditions changed from "wet" to "dry". This site probably represents the northern margin of a once more extensive proto-Lake Taupo.
Keywords K-Trig; Punatekahi; Kaiapo; basalt; surtseyan; strombolian; phreatomagmatic; tuff cone; scoria cone; Taupo
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