Blocky versus fluidal peperite textures developed in volcanic conduits, vents and
crater lakes of phreatomagmatic volcanoes in Mio/Pliocene volcanic fields of Western
Hungary
Volcanic fields in the Pannonian Basin, Western Hungary, comprise several Mio/Pliocene
volcaniclastic successions that are penetrated by numerous mafic intrusions. Peperite
formed where intrusive and extrusive basaltic magma mingled with tuff, lapilli-tuff,
and non-volcanic siliciclastic sediments within vent zones. Peperite is more common
in the Pannonian Basin than generally realised and may be also important in other
settings where sediment sequences accumulate during active volcanism. Hajagos-hegy,
an erosional remnant of a maar volcano, was subsequently occupied by a lava lake that
interacted with unconsolidated sediments in the maar basin and formed both blocky
and globular peperite. Similar peperite developed in Kissomlyo, a small tuff ring
remnant, where dykes invaded lake sediments that formed within a tuff ring. Lava foot
peperite from both Hajagos-hegy and Kissomlyo were formed when small lava flows travelled
over wet sediments in craters of phreatomagmatic volcanoes. At Sag-hegy, a large phreatomagmatic
volcanic complex, peperite formed along the margin of a coherent intrusion. All peperite
in this study could be described as globular or blocky peperite. Globular and blocky
types in the studied fields occur together regardless of the host sediment. (c) 2006
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