Abstract:
Mount Tauhara is the largest dacitic volcanic complex of onshore New Zealand and comprises seven
subaerial domes and associated lava and pyroclastic flows, with a total exposed volume of ca. 1 km3. The
dacites have a complex petrography including quartz, plagioclase, amphibole, orthopyroxene,
clinopyroxene, olivine and Fe‐Ti oxides and offer an excellent opportunity to investigate the processes
and timescales involved in assembling dacitic magma bodies in a continental subduction zone with in
situ and mineral specific analytical techniques.
Whole rock major and trace element data and Pb isotopes ratios define linear relationships indicating
that the dacites are generated by mixing of silicic and mafic magmas. Two groups of samples define
separate mixing trends between four endmembers on the basis of La/Yb ratios, 87Sr/86Sr ratios and Sr
contents. The older Western and Central Domes have low 87Sr/86Sr (0.7042‐0.7046) and high LREE/HREE
(LaN/YbN = 8.0‐11.5) and Sr (380‐650 ppm) compared to the younger Hipaua, Trig M, Breached and Main
Domes, which have higher 87Sr/86Sr (0.7047‐0.7052) and lower LREE/HREE (LaN/YbN = 6.5‐7.5) and Sr
(180‐400 ppm).
In situ mineral major and trace element chemistry of mineral phases, as well as Sr and Pb isotope ratios
of mineral separates have been used to: (i) fingerprint the origin of each crystal phase; (ii) constrain the
chemistry of the four endmembers involved in the mixing events and; (iii) estimate the timing of mixing
relative to eruption and the ascent rate of the dacitic magmas. The presence of quartz and analyses of
quartz‐hosted melt inclusions are used to fingerprint the chemistry of the silicic endmembers, which is a
rhyolitic melt with a major element chemistry similar to that of either the Whakamaru Group Ignimbrite
melts (Western, Central and Trig M Domes) or intermediate between that of the Whakamaru and the
Oruanui Ignimbrite melts (Hipaua, Breached and Main Domes). Similarly, Ba‐Sr concentrations and Sr
isotopic signatures of plagioclase show that this phenocryst phase also predominantly crystallized from
the rhyolitic melt. Variations in the Mg# and trace element chemistry of clinopyroxenes suggest they
were formed both in the mixed dacitic melts and in a mafic endmember. The chemistry of the mafic
endmembers have been traced using a combination of back‐calculated Sr melt concentrations from
clinopyroxene with the highest Mg# in each sample group, and the linear trends between whole rock
SiO2 content and most elements. These results indicate that dacites erupted from the Western and
Central Dome were generated by the mixing of a high alumina basalt and a rhyolitic melt and Trig M
Dome dacites were generated by the mixing of an andesite with a rhyolitic melt. Magmas erupted from
Hipaua, Breached and Main Domes were also produced by the mixing of an andesitic melt and a rhyolitic
body with a composition intermediate between that of the Whakamaru and the Oruanui melt bodies.
Trace element data and 87Sr/86Sr ratios of amphibole demonstrate that it crystallized from the mixed
dacitic melt. Thermobarometric conditions obtained from amphibole indicate that the magma mixing
event that produced the dacites occurred within a magma chamber located at ca. 9 km depth and ca.
900°C with the exception of Trig M Dome which occurred deeper at 13 km and 950°C. Diffusion profiles
of Ti in quartz and Fe‐Mg in clinopyroxene indicate the magma mixing events occurred < 6 months prior
to eruption. Amphibole reaction rims show the magma to have ascended over 2‐3 weeks for each dome,
with the exception of Main Dome where reaction rims were not present in the amphibole, suggesting
the ascent rate was faster than 0.2 m/s (< 6 hours).