
Sulfur isotopic compositions of fumarolic and plume gases at Mount Etna (Italy) and inferences on their magmatic source
Author(s) -
Liotta M.,
Rizzo A.,
Paonita A.,
Caracausi A.,
Martelli M.
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
geochemistry, geophysics, geosystems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.928
H-Index - 136
ISSN - 1525-2027
DOI - 10.1029/2012gc004118
Subject(s) - melt inclusions , geology , fumarole , plume , sulfur , geochemistry , volcano , lava , magma , fractionation , basalt , volcanic gases , mineralogy , isotope fractionation , earth science , chemistry , physics , organic chemistry , thermodynamics
Here we report new data on the sulfur isotopic compositions ( δ 34 S) of fumarolic and plume gases collected at Mount Etna volcano during 2008–2009. While low‐temperature fumaroles are affected by postmagmatic processes that modify the pristine isotopic signature, high‐temperature and plume gases allow establishment of a δ 34 S range of ∼0 ± 1‰ for magmatic SO 2 . We compared our data with those from S dissolved in primitive melt inclusions from 2002 lava and in whole rocks that erupted during the past two thousand years. Such a comparison revealed that δ 34 S is systematically lower for magmatic gases than for sulfur dissolved in the melt. We modeled how isotopic fractionation due to magma degassing process may vary δ 34 S value in both the melt and gaseous phases. This modeling required assessment of the fractionation factor ( α gas‐melt ). The most recent measurements on the oxidation state of sulfur in basaltic melt inclusions indicate that nearly all S is dissolved as sulfate (S 6+ ), which would be possible in oxidized magmatic systems (ΔNNO ≥ 1). Under these conditions the exsolved gaseous phase is depleted with respect to the melt and the proposed model fits both gas and melt data, and constrains the Etnean magmatic δ 34 S to 1.0 ± 1.5‰. It is remarkable that the assessed redox conditions—which are significantly more oxidizing than previously thought—are able to explain why the dominant sulfur species measured in the Etnean plume is SO 2 .