TY - JOUR A1 - Ranta, Eemu A1 - Halldórsson, Sæmundur A. A1 - Barry, Peter H. A1 - Ono, Shuhei A1 - Robin, Jóhann Gunnarsson A1 - Kleine, Barbara I. A1 - Ricci, Andrea A1 - Fiebig, Jens A1 - Sveinbjörnsdóttir, Árný E. A1 - Stefánsson, Andri T1 - Deep magma degassing and volatile fluxes through volcanic hydrothermal systems: Insights from the Askja and Kverkfjöll volcanoes, Iceland T2 - Journal of volcanology and geothermal research N2 - Highlights • New fumarole and thermal water data for Askja and Kverkfjöll volcanoes, Iceland. • Data compared to modelled compositions and fluxes of magmatic gas. • Fumarole compositions compatible with origin of CO2 and S from degassing intrusions. • Intrusive magmatic fluxes sufficient to sustain hydrothermal fluxes of CO2 and S in Iceland • Magma degassing insignificant/minor source of H2O and Cl to Icelandic hydrothermal fluids Abstract Mantle volatiles are transported to Earth's crust and surface by basaltic volcanism. During subaerial eruptions, vast amounts of carbon, sulfur and halogens can be released to the atmosphere during a short time-interval, with impacts ranging in scale from the local environment to the global climate. By contrast, passive volatile release at the surface originating from magmatic intrusions is characterized by much lower flux, yet may outsize eruptive volatile quantities over long timescales. Volcanic hydrothermal systems (VHSs) act as conduits for such volatile release from degassing intrusions and can be used to gauge the contribution of intrusive magmatism to global volatile cycles. Here, we present new compositional and isotopic (δD and δ18O-H2O, 3He/4He, δ13C-CO2, Δ33S-δ34S-H2S and SO4) data for thermal waters and fumarole gases from the Askja and Kverkfjöll volcanoes in central Iceland. We use the data together with magma degassing modelling and mass balance calculations to constrain the sources of volatiles in VHSs and to assess the role of intrusive magmatism to the volcanic volatile emission budgets in Iceland. The CO2/ΣS (10−30), 3He/4He (8.3–10.5 RA; 3He/4He relative to air), δ13C-CO2 (−4.1 to −0.2 ‰) and Δ33S-δ34S-H2S (−0.031 to 0.003 ‰ and −1.5 to +3.6‰) values in high-gas flux fumaroles (CO2 > 10 mmol/mol) are consistent with an intrusive magmatic origin for CO2 and S at Askja and Kverkfjöll. We demonstrate that deep (0.5–5 kbar, equivalent to ∼2–18 km crustal depth) decompression degassing of basaltic intrusions in Iceland results in CO2 and S fluxes of 330–5060 and 6–210 kt/yr, respectively, which is sufficient to account for the estimated CO2 flux of Icelandic VHSs (3365–6730 kt/yr), but not the VHS S flux (220–440 kt/yr). Secondary, crystallization-driven degassing from maturing intrusions and leaching of crustal rocks are suggested as additional sources of S. Only a minor proportion of the mantle flux of Cl is channeled via VHSs whereas the H2O flux remains poorly constrained, because magmatic signals in Icelandic VHSs are masked by a dominant shallow groundwater component of meteoric water origin. These results suggest that the bulk of the mantle CO2 and S flux to the atmosphere in Iceland is supplied by intrusive, not eruptive magmatism, and is largely vented via hydrothermal fields. KW - Hydrothermal fluids KW - Stable isotopes KW - Magmatic volatiles KW - Magma degassing KW - Volatile fluxes KW - Iceland Y1 - 2023 UR - http://publikationen.ub.uni-frankfurt.de/frontdoor/index/index/docId/78906 UR - https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:hebis:30:3-789062 SN - 0377-0273 VL - 436 IS - 107776 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER -