HYPOGENE HYDROTHERMAL ALTERATION OF QUATERNARY VOLCANIC ROCKS FROM MOUNT RAINIER, WASHINGTON
Assemblage 1 is most common. Clay minerals replace mafic phenocrysts and groundmass and fill vesicles. Plagioclase phenocrysts commonly are fresh or weakly altered. XRD and SEM-EDA studies suggest a variety of smectite minerals. Pyrite is present as disseminated crystals, vesicle linings, and narrow vein fillings. Anhydrite/gypsum and barite are present locally.
Less common assemblage 2 shows complete replacement of primary igneous materials and includes clasts of multiple-generation hydrothermal(?) breccias cemented by opal, alunite, kaolinite, and pyrite. Alunite mostly forms fine-grained (<5 µm) lath-like crystals locally intergrown with kaolinite. Coarser-grained alunite (up to 30 µm) locally fills vugs and contains P-rich domains. Pyrite/marcasite content reaches 20%. Vug-filling anhydrite/gypsum, sulfur, cinnabar, barite, and fluorite also occur. Assemblage 3 is present in brecciated clasts in the Paradise Lahar on the south side of Mount Rainier. It comprises clasts of opalized andesite (± pyrite) cemented by multiple generations of compositionally zoned natroalunite and natrojarosite (molar K/(K+Na) < 0.0 to 0.3). Vug-filling sulfur is present locally.
The alteration assemblages reflect a complex interplay among volcanism, igneous intrusions, magmatic degassing, atmospheric oxygen, meteoric water, and a fluctuating ground water table on the volcano. Ongoing detailed geochemical, stable isotopic, and geochronologic studies will further elucidate these processes.