October 23, 2013

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Volcanic Drivers

LPOD-Oct23-13.jpg
image by Alfredo Vidal, L'Hospitalet del Llobregat / Barcelona (Catalonia/Spain)

On Earth, geologists have learned to at least partially understand why one type of volcano is located in a particular area and other types are in other regions. Plate tectonics is the major control because that strongly influences magma composition, gas content, volume and viscosity. The lack of plate tectonics now or ever on the Moon takes away that familiar key to understanding lunar volcanism. A case is point is the very familar occurrence of four different styles of volcanism in Oceanus Procellarum. Rümker is a massive pile of volcanic domes, resulting from eruption of lavas that flowed relatively easily away from vents. The nearby Aristarchus Plateau is veneered by pyroclastic deposits (ash) erupted from the Cobra Head volcanic mountain - these eruptions were explosively-driven by gases that don't seem to have been as abundant in other lunar magmas. Near the center of Procellarum are the Marius Hills, a tight grouping of a few hundred relatively steep-sided cones that probably formed from eruptions intermediate in gas content between Rümker and the Plateau pyroclastics. The volume of each eruption episode was relatively low because the cones are individually small. All three of these large volcanic complexes are surrounded by and embayed by mare lavas that were immensely more voluminous and apparently less viscous. And the Marius Hills shows us that magma conditions can change over time even at one location. Although most of the Hills are cones, there are some more gently-sided domes, rimless vents that were sources of rilles, and the massive and coarse lava flows on the north of the Hills. We can speculate, for example, that there must have been more or less gas available at different times to drive these different types of eruptions but we don't know why the gas content changed. Nor, on a larger scale, do we understand, even if all are mega-megadomes, why the three complexes are so different. See, there is plenty for young selenogists to do.

Chuck Wood

Technical Details
10/16/2013, 20:34:29 UT. Celestron C-11 Edge HD, f: 10, camera QHY5-LII, filter IR Pass, AS!2 and Registax 6.0. Good seeing

Related Links
21st Century Atlas chart 22.

Yesterday's LPOD: Little Seen Rille

Tomorrow's LPOD: More Volcano News



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