Magma is molten rock located beneath the surface of the Earth (or any other rocky planet), and which often collects in a magma chamber.
Magma is a complex high-temperature (between 650 and 1200 °C) silicate solution that is ancestral to all igneous rocks. It is capable of intrusion into adjacent crustal rocks or extrusion onto the surface. Magma is under high pressure and sometimes emerges through volcanic vents in the form of flowing lava (molten rock as it exists above the Earth's surface) and pyroclastic ejecta. These products of a volcanic eruption usually contain liquids, crystals and dissolved gases which have never before reached the planet's surface.
Magma collects in many separate magma chambers within the Earth's crust, and will have slightly different compositions in different places, which can occur at either a subduction zone, a rift zone or mid-oceanic ridge, or above a mantle plume hotspot. Magma's formation only takes place under specific conditions in the Earth's asthenosphere.
Melting of solid rock to form magma is controlled by three physical parameters; its temperature, pressure and composition.
The geothermal gradient averages about 25°C/km with a wide range from a low of 5-10°C/km within oceanic trenches and subduction zones to 30-50°C/km under mid-ocean ridges and volcanic arc environments.
A sudden decrease in pressure can cause what is known as decompression melting. This may occur due to tectonic adjustments or from the rise of a volume of rock to a shallow depth in the Earth's crust.
The presence of volatile phases in a rock acts similar to a solvent, assisting in the break-down of the strong silicate bonds in the minerals of a rock. This is a very important process for generating melts, as the presence of even 1% water may reduce the temperature of melting by as much as 100°C. Conversely, the loss of water and volatiles from a magma may cause it to essentially freeze or soldify.
Melts can stay in place long enough to melt to 20% or even 35%, but are rarely melted in excess of 50%, because eventually the melted rock mass becomes a crystal and melt mush typically known as magma. This crystal-liquid mush can then ascend en masse as a diapir, which may then cause further decompression melting. This is considered one possible mechanism for generating mantle plumes and large igneous provinces.
For instance, a series of basalt flows are assumed to be related to one another. A composition from which they could reasonably be produced by fractional crystallization is termed a parental melt. To prove this, fractional crystallization models would be produced to test the hypothesis that they share a common parental melt.
Next to enter the melt are some transition elements, aluminium, calcium, sodium, magnesium and some iron. The residual part of the melted rock is usually enriched in compatible elements such as zirconium, hafnium, titanium, etcetera.
Thus, the degree of partial melting required to form a melt can be estimated by considering the relative enrichment of incompatible elements versus compatible elements.
Rock types produced by small degrees of partial melting, which usually occurs at great depths in the mantle, are typically alkaline (Ca, Na), potassic (K) and/or peralkaline (high aluminium to silica ratio). Typically, primitive melts of this composition form lamprophyre, lamproite, kimberlite and sometimes nepheline-bearing mafic rocks such as alkali basalts and essexite gabbros or even carbonatite.
Small degrees of partial melting of the continental crust produce alkaline silica-undersaturated rocks such as nepheline syenite, foidolite, phonolite, tephrite and rocks of the melilite association.
Rocks produced by moderate degrees of partial melting of the mantle include calc-alkaline basalts, picrites, some forms of lamprophyre and other potassic rocks such as ankaramite, shoshonite, etcetera, trending toward tholeiite basalt at higher degrees of partial melting.
Moderate degrees of partial melting of the crust produces S-type and I-type granite in all its forms, including volcanic equivalents such as andesite, rhyolite, dacite and so forth.
At high degrees of partial melting of the mantle, komatiite, boninite and picrite are produced. At high degrees of partial melting of the crust, granitoids such as tonalite, granodiorite and diorite to monzonite can be produced, although this is usually uncommon.
A combination of high temperature and low pressure near surface environments are most conducive to melting due to pressure reduction.
Magma can also be formed due to the addition of volatiles to heated rock. Volatiles (water and gases) are released from a descending slab of oceanic crust as it is subducted, these volatiles move into the overlying crustal material and initiate melting. Volatiles can break up the mineral bonds within the melting rock and cause its melting point to decrease, allowing for magma formation.
Magma formation also results due to the melting of crustal rock by pre-existing magma whose temperature is so great that it melts the crust as it rises, creating even more magma.
Magma rises primarily because a melt is less dense than its source rock, it is propelled upward through the lithosphere by the buoyancy that its lower density creates (the way less dense wood is pushed up and floats in denser water). This results in the formation of magma chambers and eventually volcanoes, magma being pushed all the way to the Earth's surface results in a volcanic eruption.
The composition of magma will change depending on the make-up of the rocks that it melts as it penetrates the Earth's crust to erupt in the form of lava. Fractional crystallization, contamination and magma mixing are some of the processes by which a primary melt can change composition enroute to the surface.
Characteristics of different magmas are as follows:
Petrology | Volcanology | Igneous rocks
Magma | Magma | Magma | Magma | Magma | Magma | تفتال (زمینشناسی) | Magma (géologie) | 마그마 | מאגמה | Lava | Magma | Magma | Magma | マグマ | Magma | Magma | Магма | Magma | மக்மா | หินหนืด | Macma | 岩漿