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Volcanic breccia and hyaloclastite in blocks from the Nuuanu and Wailau landslides, Hawaii Volcanic breccia and hyaloclastite in blocks from the Nuuanu and Wailau landslides, Hawaii

Steep slopes of giant landslide blocks in the Nuuanu and Wailau landslides expose fragmental volcanic rocks subdivided into monomict and polymic t hyaloclastite and breccia. The various samples form as 1) secondary slopemantling unlithified polymict breccia consisting of clasts set in a mud matrix; 2 ) monomict and polymict hyaloclastite and polymict breccia, with zeolite cement, that...
Authors
D. Clague, James G. Moore, A. S. Davis

Seismicity, gas emission and deformation from 18 July to 25 September 1995 during the initial phreatic phase of the eruption of Soufrière Hills Volcano, Montserrat Seismicity, gas emission and deformation from 18 July to 25 September 1995 during the initial phreatic phase of the eruption of Soufrière Hills Volcano, Montserrat

On 18 July 1995, after more than three years of irregularly increasing seismicity, phreatic explosions opened a new vent on Soufrière Hills Volcano, about 4 km east of the capital city of Plymouth, Montserrat. By early August 1995, the volcano was monitored by a nine-station seismic network, three telemetered electronic tiltmeters, and daily correlation spectroscopy (COSPEC) flights to...
Authors
Cynthia A. Gardner, Randall A. White

A Holocene paleosecular variation from 14C-dated volcanic rocks in western North America A Holocene paleosecular variation from 14C-dated volcanic rocks in western North America

A paleosecular variation (PSV) curve for western North America is presented on the basis of 94 virtual geomagnetic poles (VGPs) from dated volcanic rocks sampled at 446 sites. Approximately 60% of the paleomagnetic database has been previously published. A curve defined by “spherical smoothed splines” is fitted to the VGPs, ranked by the quality of the age determinations, where the data...
Authors
Jonathan T. Hagstrum, Duane E. Champion

The Fish Canyon magma body, San Juan volcanic field, Colorado: Rejuvenation and eruption of an upper-crustal batholith The Fish Canyon magma body, San Juan volcanic field, Colorado: Rejuvenation and eruption of an upper-crustal batholith

More than 5000 km3 of nearly compositionally homogeneous crystal-rich dacite (∼68 wt % SiO2: ∼45% Pl + Kfs + Qtz + Hbl + Bt + Spn + Mag + Ilm + Ap + Zrn + Po) erupted from the Fish Canyon magma body during three phases: (1) the pre-caldera Pagosa Peak Dacite (an unusual poorly fragmented pyroclastic deposit, ∼200 km3); (2) the syn-collapse Fish Canyon Tuff (one of the largest known...
Authors
Olivier Bachmann, Michael A. Dungan, Peter W. Lipman

Sun photometer and lidar measurements of the plume from the Hawaii Kilauea Volcano Pu'u O'o vent: Aerosol flux and SO2 lifetime Sun photometer and lidar measurements of the plume from the Hawaii Kilauea Volcano Pu'u O'o vent: Aerosol flux and SO2 lifetime

Aerosol optical depths and lidar measurements were obtained under the plume of Hawaii Kilauea Volcano on August 17, 2001, ∼9 km downwind from the erupting Pu'u O'o vent. Measured aerosol optical depths (at 500 nm) were between 0.2–0.4. Aerosol size distributions inverted from the spectral sun photometer measurements suggest the volcanic aerosol is present in the accumulation mode (0.1–0...
Authors
J.N. Porter, K.A. Horton, P. J. Mouginis-Mark, B. Lienert, S.K. Sharma, E. Lau, T. Elias, A. J. Sutton, C. Oppenheimer

Structure and physical characteristics of pumice from the climactic eruption of Mount Mazama (Crater Lake), Oregon Structure and physical characteristics of pumice from the climactic eruption of Mount Mazama (Crater Lake), Oregon

The vesicularity, permeability, and structure of pumice clasts provide insight into conditions of vesiculation and fragmentation during Plinian fall and pyroclastic flow-producing phases of the ~7,700 cal. year B.P. climactic eruption of Mount Mazama (Crater Lake), Oregon. We show that bulk properties (vesicularity and permeability) can be correlated with internal textures and that the...
Authors
C. Klug, K. Cashman, Charles R. Bacon

Fault structure and kinematics of the Long Valley Caldera region, California, revealed by high-accuracy earthquake hypocenters and focal mechanism stress inversions Fault structure and kinematics of the Long Valley Caldera region, California, revealed by high-accuracy earthquake hypocenters and focal mechanism stress inversions

We have determined high-resolution hypocenters for 45,000+ earthquakes that occurred between 1980 and 2000 in the Long Valley caldera area using a double-difference earthquake location algorithm and routinely determined arrival times. The locations reveal numerous discrete fault planes in the southern caldera and adjacent Sierra Nevada block (SNB). Intracaldera faults include a series of...
Authors
Stephanie Prejean, William L. Ellsworth, Mark Zoback, Felix Waldhauser

Source mechanism of very-long-period signals accompanying dome growth activity at Merapi volcano, Indonesia Source mechanism of very-long-period signals accompanying dome growth activity at Merapi volcano, Indonesia

Very-long-period (VLP) pulses with period of 6–7s, displaying similar waveforms, were identified in 1998 from broadband seismographs around the summit crater. These pulses accompanied most of multiphase (MP) earthquakes, a type of long-period event locally defined at Merapi Volcano. Source mechanisms for several VLP pulses were examined by applying moment tensor inversion to the waveform...
Authors
D. Hidayat, B. Chouet, B. Voight, P. Dawson, Antonius Ratdomopurbo

Publications of the Volcano Hazards Program 2001 Publications of the Volcano Hazards Program 2001

The Volcano Hazards Program of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is part of the Geologic Hazards Assessments subactivity as funded by Congressional appropriation. Investigations are carried out in the Geology and Hydrology Disciplines of the USGS and with cooperators at the Alaska Division of Geological and Geophysical Surveys, University of Alaska Fairbanks Geophysical Institute...
Authors
Manuel Nathenson

Sulfur dioxide emission rates from Kīlauea Volcano, Hawai‘i, an update: 1998-2001 Sulfur dioxide emission rates from Kīlauea Volcano, Hawai‘i, an update: 1998-2001

Introduction Sulfur dioxide (SO2) emission rates from Kilauea Volcano were first measured by Stoiber and Malone (1975) and have been measured on a regular basis since 1979 (Greenland and others, 1985; Casadevall and others, 1987; Elias and others, 1998; Sutton and others, 2001). A compilation of SO2 emission-rate and wind-vector data from 1979 through 1997 is available as Open-File...
Authors
Tamar Elias, A. Jefferson Sutton
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