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Hydrogeomorphic effects of explosive volcanic eruptions on drainage basins

May 1, 2014

Explosive eruptions can severely disturb landscapes downwind or downstream of volcanoes by damaging vegetation and depositing large volumes of erodible fragmental material. As a result, fluxes of water and sediment in affected drainage basins can increase dramatically. System-disturbing processes associated with explosive eruptions include tephra fall, pyroclastic density currents, debris avalanches, and lahars—processes that have greater impacts on water and sediment discharges than lava-flow emplacement. Geo-morphic responses to such disturbances can extend far downstream, persist for decades, and be hazardous. The severity of disturbances to a drainage basin is a function of the specific volcanic process acting, as well as distance from the volcano and magnitude of the eruption. Postdisturbance unit-area sediment yields are among the world's highest; such yields commonly result in abundant redeposition of sand and gravel in distal river reaches, which causes severe channel aggradation and instability. Response to volcanic disturbance can result in socioeconomic consequences more damaging than the direct impacts of the eruption itself.

Publication Year 2014
Title Hydrogeomorphic effects of explosive volcanic eruptions on drainage basins
DOI 10.1146/annurev-earth-060313-054913
Authors Thomas C. Pierson, Jon J. Major
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences
Index ID 70095477
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Volcano Hazards Program; Volcano Science Center