Abstract
The Golan Heights is a Plio-Pleistocene volcanic plateau. Cinder cones of Late Pleistocene age are very common in the eastern and northern Golan, while phreatomagmatic deposits are relatively rare and occur just in two structures - the maar of Birket Ram and the tuff ring of Mt. Avital. The complex of Mt. Avital includes two large cinder cones, a tuff ring with an elongated central depression and several basaltic flows, some of them breach the cinder cones. The (exposed) eruptive history of the complex includes (1) an early stage of basaltic lava flows, (2) strombolian activity and the buildup of the southern cinder cone, (3) a second stage of basaltic flows and the buildup of the northern cinder cone, and then a transition to (4) phreatomagmatic explosions. The phreatomagmatic deposits include surges, lapilli fallout deposits and coarse-grained lithic tuff breccias, which were found up to 200 m above the central depression. Basaltic and scoriaceous clasts are the main component of all deposits, while juvenile material is usually a minor component, almost absent in the lapilli deposits. It is suggested that the phreatomagmatic events in Mt. Avital were induced by the infiltration of water from a lake that existed in a nearby topographic low (Quneitra Valley). The lake was formed or significantly expanded at about 300 ka due to a lava flow that blocked the drainage of the valley to the west. The interlayering of tuff and scoria at the top of the northern cinder cone and the good preservation of a lava flow top breccia under the surges imply that the phreatomagmatic activity immediately followed and even coincided with the last stages of strombolian activity. It is suggested that the dry-wet transition was triggered by the effusion of the second stage lavas and the buildup of the northern cinder cone, which probably caused a reduction of pressure in the magmatic system and allowed the lake water an access to the magmatic system. The minimum age of the phreatomagmatic events is determined by a 54 ka Musterian site which lies directly on top of the tuff in the Quneitra Valley.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 267-284 |
Number of pages | 18 |
Journal | Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research |
Volume | 159 |
Issue number | 1-3 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - 1 Jan 2007 |
Bibliographical note
Funding Information:I wish to express my gratitudes to Rami Weinberger and Oded Navon for the assistance and company in the field and the helpful discussions back at home. Special thanks to Lev Karnibad that helped with the maps and graphics. Reviews by G. Carrasco-Núñez, G. Levantine and U. Martin were of great help. Last, I owe lot of thanks to Doron Mor, who was the pioneer of volcanology in the Golan Heights. Nothing could be done without his comprehensive descriptions and maps. This study was supported by the Ministry of National Infrastructure (Grant No. 24-17-024).
Funding
I wish to express my gratitudes to Rami Weinberger and Oded Navon for the assistance and company in the field and the helpful discussions back at home. Special thanks to Lev Karnibad that helped with the maps and graphics. Reviews by G. Carrasco-Núñez, G. Levantine and U. Martin were of great help. Last, I owe lot of thanks to Doron Mor, who was the pioneer of volcanology in the Golan Heights. Nothing could be done without his comprehensive descriptions and maps. This study was supported by the Ministry of National Infrastructure (Grant No. 24-17-024).
Funders | Funder number |
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Ministry of National Infrastructure | 24-17-024 |
Keywords
- base surges
- fallout
- lithic clasts
- phreatomagmatic eruptions
- scoria cones
- tuff ring