Search results for "Volcanism"

showing 10 items of 90 documents

Conduit dynamics and post explosion degassing on Stromboli: A combined UV camera and numerical modeling treatment.

2016

Abstract Recent gas flux measurements have shown that Strombolian explosions are often followed by periods of elevated flux, or “gas codas,” with durations of order a minute. Here we present UV camera data from 200 events recorded at Stromboli volcano to constrain the nature of these codas for the first time, providing estimates for combined explosion plus coda SO2 masses of ≈18–225 kg. Numerical simulations of gas slug ascent show that substantial proportions of the initial gas mass can be distributed into a train of “daughter bubbles” released from the base of the slug, which we suggest, generate the codas, on bursting at the surface. This process could also cause transitioning of slugs i…

InformaticsGeologicaluv camerasgas slugsModelingRemote Sensing and DisastersVolcanologycomputational fluid dynamicsPhysical ModelingResearch Lettersgas fluxVolcanic GasesOceanography: Generaldaughter bubblesExplosive VolcanismResearch LetterStrombolian eruptionsRemote Sensing of VolcanoesComputational GeophysicsNumerical ModelingNatural HazardsSolid EarthGeophysical research letters
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Reply to the “Comment by Delmelle et al. (2013) on ‘Scavenging of sulfur, halogens and trace metals by volcanic ash: The 2010 Eyjafjallajökull erupti…

2014

Abstract With this short communication we address the principal issues raised by Delmelle et al. (2014) in relation to the work of Bagnato et al. (2013) concerning the 2010 eruption of Eyjafjallajokull, Iceland. The principal conclusions of the work of Bagnato et al. (2013) include the observation that protracted gas-aerosol interaction in the plume promotes selective leaching of cation species from ash, with alkalis and Ca (and, among trace elements, Zn and Cu) being more rapidly re-mobilized (and transferred to soluble surface salts) relative to more inert elements (Mg, Ti). They also observed that adsorption onto ash surfaces is a major atmospheric sink of volcanic acidic gases, with 282…

LEACHING OF ASHgeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryChemistryMineralogychemistry.chemical_elementexplosive volcanismSulfurSettore GEO/08 - Geochimica E VulcanologiaPlumeexplosive volcanism; VOLCANIC ASH; EyjafjallajökullAdsorptionEyjafjallajökullVolcanoVOLCANIC ACID GASGeochemistry and PetrologyINTERACTION ASH-PLUMEHalogenddc:5502010 EYJAFJALLAJOKULL ERUPTIONSelective leachingVOLCANIC ASHScavengingVolcanic ashGeochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
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Volatiles in pantellerite magmas: A case study of the Green Tuff Plinian eruption (Island of Pantelleria, Italy)

2013

Abstract The Green Tuff (GT) Plinian eruption, the largest in magnitude at Pantelleria, erupted 3 to 7 km3 DRE of pantellerite magma and a small volume of trachyte. Fifty-nine anorthoclase-hosted melt inclusions from the two basal pumice members were analyzed by FT-IR spectroscopy in order to assess the pre-eruptive H2O content in the pantellerite melt. Microanalytical methods were used to determine major element, Cl, F and S contents. Melt inclusions and glassy groundmasses have a nearly homogeneous pantelleritic composition (peralkaline index = 1.9-2.2) and variable water contents ranging from 1.4 to as high as 4.2 wt %, i.e. much higher than the 1.4 wt % of earlier published studies. The…

LavaSettore GEO/07 - Petrologia E PetrografiaGeochemistryTrachyteMagma chamberStrombolian eruptionGeophysicsEffusive eruptionGeochemistry and PetrologyPumiceMagmaThe Green Tuff (GT) Plinian eruption the largest in magnitude at Pantelleria erupted 3 to 7 km 3 DRE of pantellerite magma and a small volume of trachyte. Fifty-nine anorthoclase-hosted melt inclusions from the two basal pumice members were analyzed by FT-IR spectroscopy in order to assess the pre-eruptive H2Ocontent in the pantellerite melt. Microanalytical methods were used to determine major element Cl F and S contents. Melt inclusions and glassy groundmasses have a nearly homogeneous pantelleritic composition (peralkaline index = 1.9-2.2) and variable water contents ranging from 1.4 to as high as 4.2 wt % i.e. much higher than the 1.4 wt % of earlier published studies. The chlorine content is constant at about 1 wt %. Combined Cl and H2O data were used to estimate a confining pressure of about 50 MPa (depth around 2-3 km) for the GT magma chamber. The chamber was characterized by a compositional zoning with a dominant pantellerite overlying a trachyte magma. Soon after the GT eruption intra-caldera volcanism was dominated by the eruption of voluminous trachyte lavaflows while pantellerite melt production resumed after about 20 ka with numerous low-volume mildly explosive (Strombolian) to effusive eruptions. Comparison with data from the literature reveals that despite the differentexplosivity the post-caldera Strombolian eruptions and the GT Plinian eruption were fed by pantelleritic magmas with similar water contents. Chlorine and CO2contents suggest that the young magma reservoirs feeding the Strombolian to effusive activity were deeper (h≥4.5 km) than the much larger (based on erupted volumes) magma chamber which fed the GT eruptionGeologyMelt inclusionsJournal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research
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Degassing of gaseous (elemental and reactive) and particulate mercury from Mount Etna volcano (Southern Italy)

2007

Abstract There is an urgent need to better constrain the global rates of mercury degassing from natural sources, including active volcanoes. Hitherto, estimates of volcanic fluxes have been limited by the poorly determined speciation of Hg in volcanic emissions. Here, we present a systematic characterisation of mercury partitioning between gaseous (Hg(g)) and particulate (Hg(p)) forms in the volcanic plume of Mount Etna, the largest open-vent passively degassing volcano on Earth. We demonstrate that mercury transport is predominantly in the gas phase, with a mean Hg(p)/Hg(g) ratio of ∼0.01 by mass. We also present the first simultaneous measurement of divalent gaseous mercury ( Hg ( g ) II …

MERCUREAtmospheric Sciencegeographygeography.geographical_feature_categorychemistry.chemical_elementMineralogyVolcanismParticulatesHgMercury (element)PlumeFlux (metallurgy)chemistryVolcanoEnvironmental chemistryPanacheGeologyGeneral Environmental ScienceAtmospheric Environment
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Outgassing of Mantle Volatiles in Compressional Tectonic Regime Away From Volcanism: The Role of Continental Delamination

2019

In this study we discuss the occurrence of mantle-derived heat and volatiles (i.e., helium and CO 2 ) feeding hydrothermal systems in a seismically active margin between two convergent plates (African and European) without any signals of volcanism. The helium (He) isotopes clearly indicate a mantle-derived component in the outgassing volatiles. The estimated mantle-derived He fluxes are up to two to three orders of magnitude greater than those in a stable continental area. Such high He fluxes cannot be provided by a long-lasting diffusion, thereby implying a more efficient transport (i.e., advective transport through faults). He data coupled to heat-He relationship suggest the occurrence of…

Mantle wedgeSettore GEO/02 - Geologia Stratigrafica E SedimentologicaSettore GEO/03 - Geologia StrutturaleVolcanismheliummantle wedgemantle volatileMantle (geology)delaminationSettore GEO/08 - Geochimica E Vulcanologiaoutput CO 2OutgassingTectonicsGeophysicsGeochemistry and PetrologyPetrologyGeophysicGeology
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Degassing vs. eruptive styles at Mt. Etna volcano (Sicily, Italy). Part I: Volatile stocking, gas fluxing, and the shift from low-energy to highly ex…

2018

International audience; Basaltic magmas can transport and release large amounts of volatiles into the atmosphere, especially in subduction zones, where slab-derived fluids enrich the mantle wedge. Depending on magma volatile content, basaltic volcanoes thus display a wide spectrum of eruptive styles, from common Strombolian-type activity to Plinian events. Mt. Etna, in Sicily, is a typical basaltic volcano where the volatile control on such a variable activity can be investigated. Based on a melt inclusion study in products from Strombolian or lava-fountain activity to Plinian eruptions, here we show that for the same initial volatile content, different eruptive styles reflect variable dega…

Melt inclusion010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesExplosive materialMantle wedgeGeochemistryengineering.material010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesMicroliteGeochemistry and Petrology[SDU.STU.VO]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/VolcanologyBasaltic explosive volcanism0105 earth and related environmental sciencesMelt inclusionsBasaltgeographygeography.geographical_feature_categorySubductionMt. EtnaTotal volatilesChemical thermodynamicsGeologyTotal volatileStrombolian eruptionChemical thermodynamicVolcano13. Climate actionengineeringMelt inclusionsGeology
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Noble gas and CO2 isotopic signatures of the lithospheric mantle underneath Mexico and the Canary Islands: clues from mantle xenoliths and arc lavas

2022

Studying the isotopic composition of fluids trapped in mantle xenoliths opens avenues to understand the origin and cycling of volatiles in the Earth’s upper mantle. In this PhD dissertation, new and in most cases the very first data regarding the isotopic (noble gases and CO2) characterization of the lithospheric mantle portions of three different geodynamic environments are presented: (i) Central and NW Mexico, a continental setting dominated by extension; (ii) the Transmexican Volcanic Belt (TMVB) a subduction setting, and (iii) the Canary Islands, particularly El Hierro and Lanzarote, two oceanic islands formed by mantle plume-derived intraplate volcanism. In total 32 peridotites (includ…

Mexico Canary Islands lithospheric mantle subduction mantle plume continental rift Basin and Range volcanism mantle xenoliths fluid inclusions noble gas isotopes carbon isotopes carbon recycling refertilization.Settore GEO/08 - Geochimica E Vulcanologia
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Scavenging of sulphur, halogens and trace metals by volcanic ash: The 2010 Eyjafjallajökull eruption

2013

The Eyjafjallajökull volcanic eruption in 2010 released considerable amounts of ash into the high troposphere-low stratosphere, leading to unprecedented disruption of air traffic over Europe. The role of such fine-grained tephra in adsorbing, and therefore rapidly scavenging, volcanogenic volatile elements such as sulphur and halogens, is explored here. We report on results (major to trace element chemistry) of leaching experiments carried out on 20 volcanic ash samples, taken from the deposits of the main phases of the eruption (March–April 2010), or directly while falling (5–9 May 2010). Ash leachate solutions from Eyjafjallajökull are dominated – among cations – by Ca and Na, and display…

Mineralogyexplosive volcanismvolcanic eruptionVolcanic GasesGeochemistry and Petrologyddc:550eventTrace metalVOLCANIC ASHmonitoring systemTephraVolatilesScavengingevent.disaster_typeVulcanian eruptionplumeChemistrystratosphere-troposphere interactionTrace elementtephrahalogentrace metalexplosive volcanism; VOLCANIC ASH; EyjafjallajökullEyjafjallajökullsulfurEnvironmental chemistryvolcanic gasVolcanic ashGeochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
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External ballistic of volcanic explosions

1983

In order to determine the kinetic energy of an explosion it is necessary to know the initial velocities of ejected fragments. Calculations of initial velocities made earlier with few exceptions did not take into account the resistance of the air and therefore, greatly underestimated the initial velocities, and consequently the energy of the explosions. A solution of the inverse problem of ballistics which takes into account air resistance makes it possible to find precise values of initial velocities of ejection, determined from the distance of ejected fragments and their ballistic coefficients. The method makes it possible to determine the kinetic energy of explosions for eruptions which w…

Nuclear explosionVulcanian eruptionExplosive eruptionBallisticsVolcanismMechanicsGeophysicsKinetic energyGeochemistry and PetrologyDragPhysics::Space PhysicsAstrophysics::Solar and Stellar AstrophysicsEjectaGeologyBulletin Volcanologique
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Unravelling textural heterogeneity in obsidian:shear-induced outgassing in the Rocche Rosse flow

2016

Obsidian flow emplacement is a complex and understudied aspect of silicic volcanism. Of particular importance is the question of how highly viscous magma can lose sufficient gas in order to erupt effusively as a lava flow. Using an array of methods we study the extreme textural heterogeneity of the Rocche Rosse obsidian flow in Lipari, a 2. km long, 100. m thick, ~. 800. year old lava flow, with respect to outgassing and emplacement mechanisms. 2D and 3D vesicle analyses and density measurements are used to classify the lava into four textural types: 'glassy' obsidian (<. 15% vesicles), 'pumiceous' lava (>. 40% vesicles), high aspect ratio, 'shear banded' lava (20-40% vesicles) and lo…

Obsidian010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesLavaMineralogySilicicRocche RosseEmplacement610 Medicine & healthVolcanismengineering.material010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesMicrolite170 EthicsGeochemistry and Petrologyddc:55010237 Institute of Biomedical Engineering1908 GeophysicsPetrologyWater content0105 earth and related environmental sciencesOutgassingOutgassingGeophysicsShear (geology)engineeringMeteoric water1906 Geochemistry and PetrologyHeterogeneityGeology
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