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      Mineralochemical Mechanism for the Formation of Salt Volcanoes: The Case of Mount Dallol (Afar Triangle, Ethiopia)

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          Abstract

          A genetic model is proposed for the formation and evolution of volcano-like structures from materials other than molten silicate rocks. The model is based on Mount Dallol (Afar Triangle, Ethiopia), currently hosting a conspicuous hydrothermal system with hot, hyper-acidic springs, forming a colorful landscape of unique mineral patterns. We reason that Mount Dallol is the last stage of the formation of a salt volcano driven by the destabilization of a thick sequence of hydrated minerals (the Houston Formation) after the emplacement of an igneous intrusion beneath the thick Danakil evaporitic sequence. Our claim is supported by field studies, calculations of the mineral/water volume balance upon mineral dehydration, and by a geothermal model of the Danakil basin predicting a temperature up to 220 °C at the Houston Formation after the intrusion of a basaltic magma without direct contact with the evaporitic sequence. Although insufficient for salt melting, this heating triggers mineral dehydration and hydrolysis, leading to a total volume increase of at least 25%. The released brine is segregated upward into a pressurized chamber, where the excess volume produced the doming of Mount Dallol. Later, the collapse of the dome formed a caldera and the emission of clastic flows. The resulting structures and materials resemble volcanic lava flows in distribution, structure, and texture but are entirely made of salty materials. This novel mechanism of the generation of pressurized brines and their later eruption extends the relevance of volcanologic studies to lower temperature ranges and unanticipated geologic contexts on Earth and possibly also on other planets.

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          Array programming with NumPy

          Array programming provides a powerful, compact and expressive syntax for accessing, manipulating and operating on data in vectors, matrices and higher-dimensional arrays. NumPy is the primary array programming library for the Python language. It has an essential role in research analysis pipelines in fields as diverse as physics, chemistry, astronomy, geoscience, biology, psychology, materials science, engineering, finance and economics. For example, in astronomy, NumPy was an important part of the software stack used in the discovery of gravitational waves 1 and in the first imaging of a black hole 2 . Here we review how a few fundamental array concepts lead to a simple and powerful programming paradigm for organizing, exploring and analysing scientific data. NumPy is the foundation upon which the scientific Python ecosystem is constructed. It is so pervasive that several projects, targeting audiences with specialized needs, have developed their own NumPy-like interfaces and array objects. Owing to its central position in the ecosystem, NumPy increasingly acts as an interoperability layer between such array computation libraries and, together with its application programming interface (API), provides a flexible framework to support the next decade of scientific and industrial analysis.
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            The IAPWS Formulation 1995 for the Thermodynamic Properties of Ordinary Water Substance for General and Scientific Use

            W. Wagner (1999)
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              Magma-maintained rift segmentation at continental rupture in the 2005 Afar dyking episode.

              Seafloor spreading centres show a regular along-axis segmentation thought to be produced by a segmented magma supply in the passively upwelling mantle. On the other hand, continental rifts are segmented by large offset normal faults, and many lack magmatism. It is unclear how, when and where the ubiquitous segmented melt zones are emplaced during the continental rupture process. Between 14 September and 4 October 2005, 163 earthquakes (magnitudes greater than 3.9) and a volcanic eruption occurred within the approximately 60-km-long Dabbahu magmatic segment of the Afar rift, a nascent seafloor spreading centre in stretched continental lithosphere. Here we present a three-dimensional deformation field for the Dabbahu rifting episode derived from satellite radar data, which shows that the entire segment ruptured, making it the largest to have occurred on land in the era of satellite geodesy. Simple elastic modelling shows that the magmatic segment opened by up to 8 m, yet seismic rupture can account for only 8 per cent of the observed deformation. Magma was injected along a dyke between depths of 2 and 9 km, corresponding to a total intrusion volume of approximately 2.5 km3. Much of the magma appears to have originated from shallow chambers beneath Dabbahu and Gabho volcanoes at the northern end of the segment, where an explosive fissural eruption occurred on 26 September 2005. Although comparable in magnitude to the ten year (1975-84) Krafla events in Iceland, seismic data suggest that most of the Dabbahu dyke intrusion occurred in less than a week. Thus, magma intrusion via dyking, rather than segmented normal faulting, maintains and probably initiated the along-axis segmentation along this sector of the Nubia-Arabia plate boundary.

                Author and article information

                Journal
                ACS Earth Space Chem
                ACS Earth Space Chem
                sp
                aesccq
                ACS Earth & Space Chemistry
                American Chemical Society
                2472-3452
                19 October 2022
                15 December 2022
                : 6
                : 12
                : 2767-2778
                Affiliations
                [1]Laboratorio de Estudios Cristalográficos. Instituto Andaluz de Ciencias de la Tierra, CSIC-Universidad de Granada , Armilla, Granada18100, Spain
                Author notes
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3753-6071
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1374-8336
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4743-8718
                Article
                10.1021/acsearthspacechem.2c00075
                9761782
                021b411d-d3f4-4a28-8406-921019c52bb8
                © 2022 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society

                Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained ( https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 14 March 2022
                : 21 September 2022
                : 21 September 2022
                Funding
                Funded by: FP7 Ideas: European Research Council, doi 10.13039/100011199;
                Award ID: 340863
                Funded by: Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad, doi 10.13039/501100003329;
                Award ID: CGL2016-78971-P
                Categories
                Article
                Custom metadata
                sp2c00075
                sp2c00075

                dallol,mineral dehydration,salt volcano,houston formation,geothermal model

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