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- Title
Caldera resurgence during the 2018 eruption of Sierra Negra volcano, Galápagos Islands.
- Authors
Bell, Andrew F.; La Femina, Peter C.; Ruiz, Mario; Amelung, Falk; Bagnardi, Marco; Bean, Christopher J.; Bernard, Benjamin; Ebinger, Cynthia; Gleeson, Matthew; Grannell, James; Hernandez, Stephen; Higgins, Machel; Liorzou, Céline; Lundgren, Paul; Meier, Nathan J.; Möllhoff, Martin; Oliva, Sarah-Jaye; Ruiz, Andres Gorki; Stock, Michael J.
- Abstract
Recent large basaltic eruptions began after only minor surface uplift and seismicity, and resulted in caldera subsidence. In contrast, some eruptions at Galápagos Island volcanoes are preceded by prolonged, large amplitude uplift and elevated seismicity. These systems also display long-term intra-caldera uplift, or resurgence. However, a scarcity of observations has obscured the mechanisms underpinning such behaviour. Here we combine a unique multiparametric dataset to show how the 2018 eruption of Sierra Negra contributed to caldera resurgence. Magma supply to a shallow reservoir drove 6.5 m of pre-eruptive uplift and seismicity over thirteen years, including an Mw5.4 earthquake that triggered the eruption. Although co-eruptive magma withdrawal resulted in 8.5 m of subsidence, net uplift of the inner-caldera on a trapdoor fault resulted in 1.5 m of permanent resurgence. These observations reveal the importance of intra-caldera faulting in affecting resurgence, and the mechanisms of eruption in the absence of well-developed rift systems. The authors here present geodetic and seismic data for a complete eruptive cycle (2005-2018) for Sierra Negra volcano, Galapagos Island. The data shows the largest pre-eruptive inflation (6.5 m) and rates of seismicity ever observed before a basaltic eruption and provides a rare illustration of caldera resurgence mechanisms.
- Subjects
GALAPAGOS Islands; VOLCANOES; CALDERAS; ISLANDS; EARTHQUAKES; DISPLAY systems; RIFTS (Geology)
- Publication
Nature Communications, 2021, Vol 12, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
2041-1723
- Publication type
Academic Journal
- DOI
10.1038/s41467-021-21596-4