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Precursory activity of the 161 ka Kos Plateau Tuff eruption, Aegean Sea (Greece)

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Abstract

The Kos Plateau Tuff (KPT) eruption of 161 ka was the largest explosive Quaternary eruption in the eastern Mediterranean. We have discovered an uplifted beach deposit of abraded pumice cobbles, directly overlain by the KPT. The pumice cobbles resemble pumice from the KPT in petrography and composition and differ from Plio-Pleistocene rhyolites on the nearby Kefalos Peninsula. The pumice contains enclaves of basaltic andesite showing chilled lobate margins, suggesting co-existence of two magmas. The deposit provides evidence that the precursory phase of the KPT eruption produced pumice rafts, and defines the paleoshoreline for the KPT, which elsewhere was deposited on land. The beach deposit has been uplifted about 120 m since the KPT eruption, whereas the present marine area south of Kos has subsided several hundred metres, as a result of regional neotectonics. The basaltic andesite is more primitive than other mafic rocks known from the Kos–Nisyros volcanic centre and contains phenocrysts of Fo89 olivine, bytownite, enstatite and diopside. Groundmass amphibole suggests availability of water in the final stages of magma evolution. Geochemical and mineralogical variation in the mafic products of the KPT eruption indicate that fractionation of basaltic magma in a base-of-crust magma chamber was followed by mixing with rhyolitic magma during eruption. Low eruption rates during the precursory activity may have minimised the extent of mixing and preserved the end-member magma types.

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Acknowledgements

Field and laboratory work were supported by a Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada discovery grant to GPP. We thank P. S. Giles and M. Salisbury for internal review and journal reviewers Claudia Principe and particularly Sharon Allen and associate editor Jocelyn McPhie for constructive criticism and advice. Geological Survey of Canada contribution 20090136.

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Correspondence to David J. W. Piper.

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Editorial responsibility: J. McPhie

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Tables of samples, electron microprobe analyses of minerals and electron microprobe analyses of glasses. (PDF 879 kb)

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Piper, D.J.W., Pe-Piper, G. & Lefort, D. Precursory activity of the 161 ka Kos Plateau Tuff eruption, Aegean Sea (Greece). Bull Volcanol 72, 657–669 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00445-010-0349-8

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