2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2015.01.008
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Magmatic gas emissions at Holocene volcanic features near Mono Lake, California, and their relation to regional magmatism

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Cited by 14 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…This is in agreement with recent work by Bergfeld et al . [] which examined degassing from Mono Lake and the Mono‐Inyo chain of domes. They propose that magmatic δ 13 C (~−4.5‰) and 3 He/ 3 He (5–6 R A ) ratios in soil gases from the North Coulee reflect the presence of a degassing basaltic intrusion, perhaps associated with Holocene volcanism [ Bray , ].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 83%
“…This is in agreement with recent work by Bergfeld et al . [] which examined degassing from Mono Lake and the Mono‐Inyo chain of domes. They propose that magmatic δ 13 C (~−4.5‰) and 3 He/ 3 He (5–6 R A ) ratios in soil gases from the North Coulee reflect the presence of a degassing basaltic intrusion, perhaps associated with Holocene volcanism [ Bray , ].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 83%
“…The low resistivity of this feature suggests an active path of hydrothermal fluid flow. Ongoing emission of magmatic fluids (CO 2 and He) near North Coulée and along the southern edge of Mono Lake support this interpretation [ Bergfeld et al , ]. Assuming the saturated rock resistivity is on the order of 2–5 Ω m, a fluid resistivity of 0.5 Ω m [ Nesbitt , ], and a cementation factor of 2, the porosity of this hydrothermal zone is estimated from Archie's equation to be on the order of ∼30%.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Tizzani et al [] used InSAR to detect ground motion between 1992 and 2000, suggesting that the area southeast and east of the Mono Craters is uplifting at 0.3–0.5 cm/yr (in the line of site direction). Recently, Bergfeld et al [] reported elevated CO 2 emissions of ∼29 t/d from Mono Craters and 3 He/ 4 He of 5.1–6.0 R A consistent with a magmatic source under Mono Craters. These studies confirm the existence of a magmatic source beneath the Mono Craters, but to date the geometry and location are not well constrained.…”
Section: Previous Geophysical Work In Mono Basinmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The δ 13 C values corresponding to the helium concentrations calculated above for the preexisting reservoir (9.1 ppmv) and fresh magmatic (34.0 ppmv) gas end‐members are −5.28‰ and −3.41‰, respectively. Interestingly, these values nearly coincide with the range of δ 13 C values (−5.03‰ to −3.46‰) reported for magmatic CO 2 at five other degassing sites in the region around Mammoth Mountain (Bergfeld et al, ). The earliest samples (through January 1990) plot well above the left end of the mixing line, as expected if CO 2 scrubbing only minimally fractionates the carbon isotopes.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%