“…In periodically replenished magmatic reservoirs, the relative volume of magma and residual melt of various compositions change over hundreds of thousands to millions of years as a function of the average rate of magma injection, the thermal properties and chemistry of the wall rocks and the topology of the pertinent phase diagrams for magmas contained within the magmatic system (Spera and Bohrson, 2001;Annen et al, 2006;Glazner, 2007;Solano et al, 2012Solano et al, , 2014Melekhova et al, 2013;Caricchi et al, 2014;Nandedkar et al, 2014;Caricchi and Blundy, 2015a). The rate of magma transfer between the different portions of a magmatic system plays a pivotal role in controlling the physical and chemical evolution of magmas from the mantle to the surface, creating an intrinsic link between temperature evolution, crystallization, and variation of residual melt composition (Crisp, 1984;Annen et al, 2006;White et al, 2006;Glazner, 2007;Stolper and Asimow, 2007;Annen, 2009;Caricchi et al, 2014;Caricchi and Blundy, 2015b). Therefore, determining magma fluxes within the Earth's crust would allow us to establish links between the geochemistry of magmas erupted at the surface and the temporal evolution of the chemical and physical properties of magmatic reservoirs at depth.…”