If the magma is not erupted, the same process continues but more and different minerals become involved. In general, the removal of these crystals drives the composition away from that of a basalt and towards that of a rhyolite. The amount of magnesium oxide and iron oxide continues to decrease and the amount of silica, sodium oxide, and potassium oxide increases.
Other processes can become involved. The magma may melt and incorporate crustal rocks that tend to contain more silica. This drives the composition towards rhyolite. The rising magma may also intersect and mix with a magma that has evolved differently. This will also change its composition.
These processes (crystal settling, assimilation, and magma mixing) influence the composition of the magma. Geochemists study the minerals and the chemistry of the lava to determine which processes were involved and how big of a role each one played.
Source of Information:
Clague, D.A., and Denlinger, R.P., 1994, Role of olivine cumulates in
destabilizing the flanks of Hawaiian volcanoes: Bulletin of Volcanology,
v. 56, p. 425-434.
P.S. Clague and Denlinger report the following composition for average Kilauea primary magma: SiO2 (49%), TiO2 (1.9%), Al2O3 (10.7), FeO (11.2%), MgO (16.5%), CaO (8.55%), Na2O (1.66%), K2O (0.30%), P2O5 (0.18%).
Steve Mattox, University of North Dakota
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