Document Type
Article
Publication Date
10-16-2014
Abstract
Volcan Santiaguito (Guatemala) “breathes” with extraordinary regularity as the edifice's conduit system accumulates free gas, which periodically vents to the atmosphere. Periodic pressurization controls explosion timing, which nearly always occurs at peak inflation, as detected with tiltmeters. Tilt cycles in January 2012 reveal regular 26 ± 6 min inflation/deflation cycles corresponding to at least ~101 kg/s of gas fluxing the system. Very long period (VLP) earthquakes presage explosions and occur during cycles when inflation rates are most rapid. VLPs locate ~300 m below the vent and indicate mobilization of volatiles, which ascend at ~50 m/s. Rapid gas ascent feeds pyroclast-laden eruptions lasting several minutes and rising to ~1 km. VLPs are not observed during less rapid inflation episodes; instead, gas vents passively through the conduit producing no infrasound and no explosion. These observations intimate that steady gas exsolution and accumulation in shallow reservoirs may drive inflation cycles at open-vent silicic volcanoes.
Copyright Statement
This document was originally published by the American Geophysical Union in the Geophysical Research Letters. Copyright restrictions may apply. doi: 10.1002/2014GL061310
Publication Information
Johnson, Jeffrey B.; Lyons, J. J.; Andrews, B. J.; and Lees, J. M.. (2014). "Explosive Dome Eruptions Modulated by Periodic Gas-Driven Inflation". Geophysical Research Letters, 41(19), 6689–6697. https://doi.org/10.1002/2014GL061310