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- Title
Magma-hydrothermal system interaction inferred from volcanic gas measurements obtained during 2003-2008 at Meakandake volcano, Hokkaido, Japan.
- Authors
Shinohara, H.; Matsushima, N.; Kazahaya, K.; Ohwada, M.
- Abstract
Phreatic eruptions occurred at the Meakandake volcano in 1988, 1996, 1998, 2006, and 2008. We conducted geochemical surveillance that included measurements of temperature, SO emission rates, and volcanic gas composition from 2003 to 2008 at the Nakamachineshiri (NM), Northwest (NW), and Akanuma (AK) fumarolic areas, and the 96-1 vent, where historical eruptions had occurred. The elemental compositions of the gases discharged from the different areas are similar compared with the large variations observed in volcanic gases discharged from subduction zones. All the gases showed high apparent equilibrium temperatures, suggesting that all these gases originated from a common magmatic gas. The gases discharged from each area also exhibited different characteristics, which are probably the results of differences in the conditions of meteoric water mixing, quenching of chemical reactions, and vapor-liquid separation. The highest apparent equilibrium temperatures (about 500°C) were observed in the case of NW fumarolic gases, despite the low outlet temperature of about 100°C at these fumaroles. Since the NW fumaroles were formed as a result of the 2006 phreatic eruption, the high-temperature gas supply to the NW fumarole suggests that the phreatic eruption was caused by the ascent of high-temperature magmatic gases. The temperatures, compositions, and emission rates of the NM and 96-1 gases did not show any appreciable change after the 2006 eruption, indicating that each fumarolic system had a separate magmatic-hydrothermal system. The temperatures, compositions, and emission rates of the NM fumarolic gases were apparently constant, and these fumaroles are inferred to be formed by the evaporation of a hydrothermal system with a constant temperature of about 300°C. The 96-1 gas compositions showed large changes during continuous temperature decrease from 390° to 190°C occurred from 2003 to 2008, but the sulfur gas emission rates were almost constant at about four tons/day. At the 96-1 vent, the SO/HS ratio decreased, while the H/HO ratio remained almost constant; this was probably caused by the rock-buffer controlled chemical reaction during the temperature decrease.
- Subjects
HOKKAIDO (Japan); JAPAN; VOLCANIC gases; WATER table; SUBDUCTION zones; ANALYTICAL geochemistry
- Publication
Bulletin of Volcanology, 2011, Vol 73, Issue 4, p409
- ISSN
0258-8900
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s00445-011-0463-2