Publications
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Long-term changes in quiescent degassing at Mount Baker Volcano, Washington, USA; Evidence for a stalled intrusion in 1975 and connection to a deep magma source Long-term changes in quiescent degassing at Mount Baker Volcano, Washington, USA; Evidence for a stalled intrusion in 1975 and connection to a deep magma source
Long-term changes have occurred in the chemistry, isotopic ratios, and emission rates of gas at Mount Baker volcano following a major thermal perturbation in 1975. In mid-1975 a large pulse in sulfur and carbon dioxide output was observed both in emission rates and in fumarole samples. Emission rates of CO2 and H2S were ∼ 950 and 112 t/d, respectively, in 1975; these decreased to ∼ 150...
Authors
Cynthia A. Werner, William C. Evans, Michael P. Poland, Michael P. Doukas, D.S. Tucker
Observation and modeling of source effects in coda wave interferometry at Pavlof volcano Observation and modeling of source effects in coda wave interferometry at Pavlof volcano
Sorting out source and path effects for seismic waves at volcanoes is critical for the proper interpretation of underlying volcanic processes. Source or path effects imply that seismic waves interact strongly with the volcanic subsurface, either through partial resonance in a conduit (Garces et al., 2000; Sturton and Neuberg, 2006) or by random scattering in the heterogeneous volcanic...
Authors
Matthew M. Haney, Wijik K. van, L.A. Preston, D.F. Aldridge
A field guide to Newberry Volcano, Oregon A field guide to Newberry Volcano, Oregon
Newberry Volcano is located in central Oregon at the intersection of the Cascade Range and the High Lava Plains. Its lavas range in age from ca. 0.5 Ma to late Holocene. Erupted products range in composition from basalt through rhyolite and cover ~3000 km2. The most recent caldera-forming eruption occurred ~80,000 years ago. This trip will highlight a revised understanding of the volcano...
Authors
Robert A. Jenson, Julie M. Donnelly-Nolan, Daniele McKay
Laguna del Maule volcanic field: Eruptive history of a Quaternary basalt-to-rhyolite distributed volcanic field on the Andean rangecrest in central Chile Laguna del Maule volcanic field: Eruptive history of a Quaternary basalt-to-rhyolite distributed volcanic field on the Andean rangecrest in central Chile
The Laguna del Maule (LdM) volcanic field, which surrounds the 54-km2 lake of that name, covers ~500 km2 of rugged glaciated terrain with Quaternary lavas and tuffs that extend for 40 km westward from the Argentine frontier and 30 km north-south from the Rio Campanario to Laguna Fea. The distributed rear-arc volcanic field is contiguous with the Tatara-San Pedro stratovolcano complex on...
Authors
Wes Hildreth, Estanislao Godoy, Judy Fierstein, Brad Singer
The United States national volcanic ash operations plan for aviation The United States national volcanic ash operations plan for aviation
Volcanic-ash clouds are a known hazard to aviation, requiring that aircraft be warned away from ash-contaminated airspace. The exposure of aviation to potential hazards from volcanoes in the United States is significant. In support of existing interagency operations to detect and track volcanic-ash clouds, the United States has prepared a National Volcanic Ash Operations Plan for...
Authors
Steven Albersheim, Marianne Guffanti
Integrated analysis of PALSAR/Radarsat-1 InSAR and ENVISAT altimeter data for mapping of absolute water level changes in Louisiana wetlands Integrated analysis of PALSAR/Radarsat-1 InSAR and ENVISAT altimeter data for mapping of absolute water level changes in Louisiana wetlands
Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) has been used to detect relative water level changes in wetlands. We developed an innovative method to integrate InSAR and satellite radar altimetry for measuring absolute or geocentric water level changes and applied the methodology to remote areas of swamp forest in coastal Louisiana. Coherence analysis of InSAR pairs suggested that the...
Authors
J.-W. Kim, Z. Lu, H. Lee, C. K. Shum, C.M. Swarzenski, T.W. Doyle, S.-H. Baek
El Chichón's "surprise" eruption in 1982: lessons for reducing volcano risk El Chichón's "surprise" eruption in 1982: lessons for reducing volcano risk
During one week (28 March–4 April 1982), three powerful explosive eruptions (VEI 5) of El Chichón Volcano caused the worst volcanic disaster in Mexico's recorded history. Pyroclastic flows and surges obliterated nine villages, killing about 2,000 people, and ashfalls downwind posed socio–economic hardships for many thousands of inhabitants of the States of Chiapas and Tabasco. The...
Authors
R.I. Tilling
Volcanism and associated hazards: The Andean perspective Volcanism and associated hazards: The Andean perspective
Andean volcanism occurs within the Andean Volcanic Arc (AVA), which is the product of subduction of the Nazca Plate and Antarctica Plates beneath the South America Plate. The AVA is Earth's longest but discontinuous continental-margin volcanic arc, which consists of four distinct segments: Northern Volcanic Zone, Central Volcanic Zone, Southern Volcanic Zone, and Austral Volcanic Zone...
Authors
R.I. Tilling
Kulanaokuaiki Tephra (ca, A.D. 400-1000): Newly recognized evidence for highly explosive eruptions at Kilauea Volcano, Hawai'i Kulanaokuaiki Tephra (ca, A.D. 400-1000): Newly recognized evidence for highly explosive eruptions at Kilauea Volcano, Hawai'i
Kīlauea may be one of the world's most intensively monitored volcanoes, but its eruptive history over the past several thousand years remains rather poorly known. Our study has revealed the vestiges of thin basaltic tephra deposits, overlooked by previous workers, that originally blanketed wide, near-summit areas and extended more than 17 km to the south coast of Hawai‘i. These deposits
Authors
R.S. Fiske, T.R. Rose, D. A. Swanson, D.E. Champion, J. P. McGeehin
After the disaster: The hydrogeomorphic, ecological, and biological responses to the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens, Washington After the disaster: The hydrogeomorphic, ecological, and biological responses to the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens, Washington
The 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens caused instantaneous landscape disturbance on a grand scale. On 18 May 1980, an ensemble of volcanic processes, including a debris avalanche, a directed pyroclastic density current, voluminous lahars, and widespread tephra fall, abruptly altered landscape hydrology and geomorphology, and created distinctive disturbance zones having varying impacts on...
Authors
Jon J. Major, Charlie Crisafulli, John Bishop
Volcano-tectonic implications of 3-D velocity structures derived from joint active and passive source tomography of the island of Hawaii Volcano-tectonic implications of 3-D velocity structures derived from joint active and passive source tomography of the island of Hawaii
We present a velocity model of the onshore and offshore regions around the southern part of the island of Hawaii, including southern Mauna Kea, southeastern Hualalai, and the active volcanoes of Mauna Loa, and Kilauea, and Loihi seamount. The velocity model was inverted from about 200,000 first-arrival traveltime picks of earthquakes and air gun shots recorded at the Hawaiian Volcano...
Authors
J. Park, J.K. Morgan, C.A. Zelt, P. G. Okubo
Precision leveling and geodetic GPS observations performed on Surtsey between 1967 and 2002 Precision leveling and geodetic GPS observations performed on Surtsey between 1967 and 2002
The load on the crust from the ~ 0.8 km3 of eruptive products of the Surtsey eruption is expected to lead to subsidence of the Surtsey island by sagging of the lithosphere, compaction of material, and slumping of the volcanic edifice. Immediately after the eruption ended in the summer of 1967 a levelling line was established across the island to monitor this expected subsidence. The line
Authors
Erik Sturkell, P. Einarsson, Halldor Geirsson, E. Tryggvason, James G. Moore, Rosa Olafsdottir