LASI V: Xeno-Pumice– Mysterious Floating Rocks of the Canary Islands

Note: Dr. Steffi Burchardt, a senior lecturer in Structural Geology at Uppsala University in Sweden, presented a talk, “Xeno-pumice erupted offshore El Hierro, Canary Islands: A tale of stoped blocks in magma chambers?” at the LASI V workshop in Port Elizabeth, South Africa in October 2012. The article below is based on this talk and also an interview with Dr. Burchardt. Over a few weeks, I am highlighting some of the research that was presented at the LASI V workshop. This is the second post in that series.

Following a period of intense seismic activity, on October 10th, 2011 a submarine eruption began approximately 1 kilometer off the coast of El Hierro, the youngest and westernmost island in the Canary Islands, which is a group of volcanic islands believed to have been formed through hotspot volcanism. The eruption was evident from the unusual conditions on the sea surface: the sea bubbled, like a Jacuzzi, and was stained green. The large green stain was easily observable from space. In the midst of these strange conditions, some highly unusual rocks were erupted. For several days after the sea started bubbling, strange floating rocks were observed and collected off the coast of La Restinga, the closest town to the undersea eruption. These floating stones were generally tens of centimeters in size and resembled lava bombs in shape. The outsides of these floating rocks consisted of basanite , a rock type commonly observed in the Canary Islands and other volcanic ocean islands. Basanites don’t generally float. However, these basanite shells floated because their insides were filled with a white to light grey, pumice-like material. Pumice is a highly vesicular rock, which means that it is a rock full of voids or bubbles, which make the rock light enough to float on water.

Figure showing the green stain on the sea during the early days of the 2011 El Hierro eruption. Figure from Troll et al., 2012.
A restingolite bomb with a basanite crust and a white, pumice-like interior. Photo courtesy of Dr. Steffi Burchardt.

While the pumice-like centers explained why the rocks floated, they also raised a multitude of questions and triggered some heated debates amongst geologists. This is because pumice is not commonly produced in the Canary Islands* or in other oceanic island hotspot environments, such as Hawaii and Iceland. The lavas erupted at oceanic island hotspots are generally mafic, low viscosity lavas such as basalts (and basanites). Viscosity is, in essence, a measure of how resistant lava is to flowing. The less viscous a lava, the more likely that lava is to flow. Therefore, low viscosity lavas such as basalts tend to flow easily and also tend to regularly release volatiles such as water and carbon dioxide. Therefore, the pressures in these lavas remain relatively low, and violent eruptions are uncommon. Pumice is most commonly produced during eruptions of felsic, highly viscous, volatile-rich lavas, which are found in environments such as island arcs, not oceanic island hotspots. The voids or bubbles in pumice represent places where volatiles have been rapidly released due to a pressure change, often during a violent eruption.

So, what was pumice-like material doing in an oceanic island eruption? A number of theories were put forward to try to explain the floating rocks that were erupted off of La Restinga. Some scientists thought the pumice-like material represented juvenile, highly silicic, highly viscous magma (such as rhyolite), which is very explosive. Other scientists proposed that the pumice-like material represented re-melted magmatic material, altered volcanic rock, or reheated hyaloclastite or zeolite from the slopes of El Hierro. Mysterious in origin, the floating stones were called “restingolites” after the nearby town of La Restinga.

After extensive analysis, a group of scientists (Troll et al., 2012) proposed an alternative hypothesis to explain the pumice-like material found in the restingolites. Based on the material’s high silica content, lack of igneous trace element signatures, and high oxygen isotope values as well as the presence of remnant quartz, jasper, carbonate, and wollastonite, Troll et al. concluded that the pumice-like material in the restingolites in fact represented xenolithic material from pre-island sedimentary layers that were picked up and heated by ascending magma, which caused the layers to partially melt and bubble. Looking like pumice and originating as xenoliths, Troll et al. dubbed the restingolites “xeno-pumice”.

Dr. Burchardt elaborates, “Xeno-pumice is definitely not an established term. We have coined it for the first time in the case of El Hierro eruption. The name comes from adding the preface ‘xeno-‘, which means foreign, to ‘pumice’. We used this term because the floating rocks of El Hierro present the characteristics of pumice, but they are actually not pumice in origin; they are actually xenoliths. We found out, based on mineralogy and also the fact that they contain detrital sand grains and fossils, that they are actually not magmatic in origin but rather that they are xenoliths from the sedimentary layers that underlay the Canary Islands. So, they are older than the volcanism. When the magma was rising, it stagnated at this level and interacted with the sedimentary rocks, sandstone and minor carbonate, and the magmas transported the xenoliths up with them to the ocean floor, where they were erupted. But in the process of the ascent of these xenoliths, they were subject to heat from the magma, so they started to melt. Since they contain a lot of water, this water started to boil and formed bubbles. The end product was something that looked like a pumice: lots of bubbles surrounded by a glassy matrix.”

Schematic from Troll et al. 2012 illustrating how the El Hierro restingolites may have formed.

Even though xeno-pumice was not a known rock type before the 2011 El Hierro eruption, Dr. Burchardt and her colleagues think that xeno-pumice may actually be a common—if not commonly recognized—rock type in other parts of the world.

Dr. Burchardt explains, “The El Hierro eruption was a very fortuitous circumstance for our work because my colleagues and I had been working on similar rocks from volcanoes worldwide, but that they were not previously recognized as xeno-pumice. The El Hierro eruption was therefore some kind of a breakthrough for our research in this field, and there will be a whole series of papers dealing with xeno-pumice from different parts of the world.”

By November, the xeno-pumice rocks were no longer being erupted, and worries that a dangerous, explosive eruption could occur at El Hierro abated. The identification of the restingolites as xeno-pumice was also good news for the hazard risk at El Hierro.

Dr. Burchardt explains, “It was good news that these xenoliths are sedimentary in origin because it means that there is no rhyolitic magma beneath the island, which means that a big explosive eruption isn’t likely.”

While the xeno-pumice rocks do not carry the message that an explosive eruption is likely to occur at El Hierro, they do carry other important messages from the deep. The unusual xeno-pumice rocks observed erupting at El Hierro in 2011 can provide much direct information about the interaction of magma and oceanic sediments and also may indicate that recycling of oceanic sediments into magma is an important process at ocean islands. Further study of xeno-pumice from the Canary Islands—and also from other parts of the world—will go a long way towards helping geologists better understand how volcanic eruptions at ocean islands interact with oceanic crust and sediments as they make their way to the surface.

 

*Update: Commentor Siim Sepp points out that intermediate composition pumice is found on the Canary Islands, most notably on the island of Tenerife. This is a very good point. I have perhaps oversimplified the explanation– pumice can be found at volcanic ocean islands under certain conditions. Thanks for pointing this out, Siim!

Reference:

Troll, V.R., Klügel, A., Longpré, M.-A., Burchardt, S., Deegan, F. M., Carracedo, J. C., Wiesmaier, S., Kuepper, U., Dahren, B., Blythe, L. S., Hansteen, T., Freda, C., Budd, D., Jolis, E. M., Jonsson, E., Meade, F. C., Harris, C., Berg, S. E., Macini, L.,  Polacci, M., and Pedroza, K. 2012. Floating stones off El Hierro, Canary Islands: xenoliths of pre-island sedimentary origin in the early products of the October 2011 eruption. Solid Earth, Vol. 3: 97-110.

Geology Word of the Week: B is for (Volcanic) Bomb

Fiesty Arenal Volcano, Costa Rica, June 2008.

This week’s geology word of the week is actually a phrase: volcanic bomb.

def. Volcanic Bomb:
A rock that forms when lava is thrown up into the air and cools very quickly. Volcanic bombs have characteristic shapes that they take on when they turn and twist in the air as they cool. They are often tear-drop shaped with a long tail. To be called a bomb, the tephra (another potential word of the week… this basically refers to material ejected by a volcano) must be greater than 64 mm in diameter. Tephra 2-64 mm in diameter is called volcanic lapilli while tephra smaller than 2mm is called volcanic ash.

Here are some links to some beautiful pictures of volcanic bombs:
Bomb #1

Bomb #2

Many more bombs!

I am posting links above because in this blog I want to make an effort not to steal photos off the internet. I want to give credit where credit is due. Unfortunately, I don’t have a good picture of a volcanic bomb in my personal collection of geology photographs. I think it’s time to visit some volcanoes…

I am, however, the proud owner of a volcanic bomb which I picked up from a volcano in California near Mono Lake. I acquired this rock during a geology field trip I went on as an undergraduate. After the field trip, I brought this rock to my parents’ house. My mom wouldn’t let me bring such a large rock inside the house, so I put it in my mother’s flower garden, where it still sits (next to some delightful pegmatite samples), certain to confuse future generations of geologists who will wonder where there are volcanoes in New Hampshire.

I was not the only one to pick up a volcanic bomb during this trip to California. We actually collected several, and we wrapped them in sleeping bags and put them in plastic coolers so that we could transport them back to New Hampshire safely. Just to make the coolers look as sketchy as possible for the TSA folks, we wrapped duct tape randomly around the coolers to keep them closed.

Here’s some advice (for a certain geology professor and everyone else): when transporting volcanic bombs via air travel DO NOT refer to the rocks as volcanic bombs. In fact, I’d go so far as to say that the words “volcanic” and “bomb” should never be uttered within an airport and certainly not in combination.

Here’s a (somewhat stylized through tricks of memory and artistic license) conversation that almost landed the entire geology field trip in a questioning room at the Las Vegas Airport:
**********
TSA official: What’s in the coolers?

Naive geology professor: Oh, those are our volcanic bombs!

TSA official: Your WHAT?

Naive geology professor: Volcanic bombs. They’re great examples, very large bombs… that’s why the coolers are so heavy.

TSA official: Sir, I need to see your passport please.

Quick-thinking geology student: What Prof. Naive meant to say is that these are scientific rock samples from X volcano in California. We’re going to take them back to our college so that we can use these specimens as classroom examples. Would you like me to show you the samples? They are really beautiful rocks.

TSA official: Beautiful rocks? You mean these coolers are full of rocks?

Naive geology professor: Yes! Beautiful examples of volcanic bom–

Quick-thinking geology student: Yes, rocks. We’re geologists. We’ve wrapped the rocks in sleeping bags so that they don’t break. If they break it would ruin some really great scientific samples for very important scientific research.

TSA official: You’re worried about the rocks breaking? So you wrapped them in sleeping bags?

Naive geology professor: And duct tape! So many uses for duct tape. I hope you don’t want to see the bombs because the duct tape is hard to–

Second quick-thinking geology student: I’d be happy to open the cooler, sir. Let me just get the tape off…

TSA official: Okay, I’d like your group to step aside. We’re going to have to hand search all your luggage.

First quick-thinking geology student (Muttered under breath to second quick-thinking geology student): Don’t let Prof. Naive say anything else… ask him a question about crystallization phases or something…
**********
Well, we did make it through security eventually and didn’t miss our flight. Again, let me repeat: do not use the phrase “volcanic bomb” in the airport. Fortunately, this incident happened several years ago before security became so crazy. I think today we would end up in the questioning room for sure.

That’s the word for this week… stay tuned for more geological tidbits! I’ll be back in a few days!