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Dive into the research topics where James Michael Rhodes is active.

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Featured researches published by James Michael Rhodes.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2004

Composition of basaltic lavas sampled by phase‐2 of the Hawaii Scientific Drilling Project: Geochemical stratigraphy and magma types

James Michael Rhodes; M. J. Vollinger

[1] This paper presents major and trace element compositions of lavas from the entire 3098 m stratigraphic section sampled by phase-2 of the Hawaii Scientific Drilling Project. The upper 245 m are lavas from Mauna Loa volcano, and the lower 2853 m are lavas and volcanoclastic rocks from Mauna Kea volcano. These intervals are inferred to represent about 100 ka and 400 ka respectively of the eruptive history of the two volcanoes. The Mauna Loa tholeiites tend to be higher in SiO2 and lower in total iron, TiO2, alkalis, and incompatible elements at a given MgO content than Mauna Kea lavas. The transition from Mauna Loa to Mauna Kea lavas is all the more pronounced because the Mauna Loa tholeiites overlie a thin sequence of postshield Mauna Kea alkalic to transitional tholeiitic lavas. The Mauna Loa tholeiites display welldeveloped coherent trends with MgO that are indistinguishable in most respects from modern lavas. With depth, however, there is a slight decline in incompatible element abundances, and small shifts to depleted isotopic ratios. These characteristics suggest small changes in melt production and source components over time, superimposed on shallow melt segregation. The Mauna Kea section is subdivided into a thin, upper 107 m sequence of postshield tholeiites, transitional tholeiites and alkali basalts of the Hamakua volcanics, overlying four tholeiitic magma types that are intercalated throughout the rest of the core. These four magma types are recognized on the basis of MgO-normalized SiO2 and Zr/Nb values. Type-1 lavas (high SiO2 and Zr/Nb) are ubiquitous below the postshield lavas and are the dominant magma type on Mauna Kea. They are inter-layered with the other three lava types. Type-2 lavas (low SiO2 but high Zr/Nb) are found only in the upper core, and especially above 850 m. Type-3 lavas (low SiO2 and Zr/Nb) are very similar to tholeiites from Loihi volcano and are present only below 1974 m. There are only 3 discrete samples of type-4 lavas (high SiO2 and low Zr/Nb), which are present in the upper and lower core. The differences between these magma types are inferred to reflect changes in melt production, depth of melt segregation, and differences in plume source components over about 400 ka of Mauna Kea’s eruptive history. At the start of this record, eruption rates were high, and two distinct tholeiitic magmas (type-1 and 3) were erupting concurrently. These two magmas require two distinct source components, one similar to that of modern Loihi tholeiites and the other close to that of Kilauea magmas. Subsequently, the Loihilike source of the type-3 magmas was exhausted, and these lavas are absent from the remainder of the core. For the next 200 ka or so, the eruptive sequence consists of inter-layered type-1 and -2 lavas that are derived from a common Mauna Kea source, the major difference between the two being the depth at which the melts segregated from the source. At around 440 ka (corresponding with the transition in the core from submarine to subaerial lavas) eruption rates began to decline and low-MgO lavas are suddenly much more abundant in the record. Continuing gradual decline in melting and eruption rates was accompanied by a decline in normalized SiO2 content of the type-1 magmas, and the eventual onset of postshield magmatism. Components: 30,168 words, 16 figures, 4 tables.


Journal of Petrology | 2000

Magmatic Processes During the Prolonged Pu’u ’O’o Eruption of Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii

Michael O. Garcia; Aaron J. Pietruszka; James Michael Rhodes; Kierstin Swanson


Bulletin of Volcanology | 1996

Petrology of lavas from the Puu Oo eruption of Kilauea Volcano: III. The Kupaianaha episode (1986–1992)

Michael O. Garcia; James Michael Rhodes; Frank A. Trusdell; Aaron J. Pietruszka


Journal of Petrology | 2008

Geochemical variations during Kilauea's Pu'u 'O'o Eruption reveal a fine-scale mixture of mantle heterogeneities within the Hawaiian Plume

J. P. Marske; Michael O. Garcia; Aaron J. Pietruszka; James Michael Rhodes; Marc D. Norman


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2006

Submarine radial vents on Mauna Loa Volcano, Hawai'i

V. Dorsey Wanless; Michael O. Garcia; F. A. Trusdell; James Michael Rhodes; Marc D. Norman; Dominique Weis; Daniel J. Fornari; Mark D. Kurz; Hervé Guillou


Archive | 2010

Evolution of Kilauea Volcano's shallow magmatic plumbing system: a geochemical perspective from historical rift lavas (1790-present)

J. P. Marske; Maribel Garcia; A. J. Pietruszka; James Michael Rhodes; Marc D. Norman; Daniel E. Heaton


Archive | 2008

Rapid Temporal Geochemical and Isotopic Variations of Tephra From the Ongoing 2008-2009 Summit Eruption of Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii

A. J. Pietruszka; Maribel Garcia; James Michael Rhodes; Marc D. Norman; Ilya N. Bindeman; John M. Eiler; D. H. Burns; J. P. Marske


Archive | 2002

Extremely Rapid Crystal Fractionation During Episodes 30-31 of the Pu`u O`o Eruption: Implications for Magma Chamber Processes

Maribel Garcia; James Michael Rhodes; A. J. Pietruszka; William I. Rose


Archive | 2009

Mantle source history and magmatic plumbing system of Kilauea Volcano inferred from the chemistry of historical (1790-1980 AD) rift zone lavas

J. P. Marske; Maribel Garcia; A. J. Pietruszka; Marc D. Norman; James Michael Rhodes


Archive | 2008

The Recent Prehistoric Geochemical Evolution of Summit Lavas From Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii

D. H. Burns; A. J. Pietruszka; Maribel Garcia; J. P. Marske; Marc D. Norman; James Michael Rhodes; Thomas J. Casadevall Casadevall

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Marc D. Norman

Australian National University

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J. P. Marske

Carnegie Institution for Science

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A. J. Pietruszka

Carnegie Institution for Science

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Dominique Weis

University of British Columbia

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F. A. Trusdell

United States Geological Survey

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M. J. Vollinger

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Daniel J. Fornari

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

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Mark D. Kurz

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

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