Publications
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A high carbon content of the Hawaiian mantle from olivine-hosted melt inclusions A high carbon content of the Hawaiian mantle from olivine-hosted melt inclusions
The deep mantle carbon content and flux are fundamental quantities in understanding global volatile cycles and distributions. Here, we present CO2 concentrations measured in 407 olivine-hosted melt inclusions from Hualalai, Kilauea, Koolau, Loihi, and Mauna Loa to constrain the Hawaiian mantle CO2 content and flux. Quantification of melt inclusion CO2 is complicated by the ubiquitous...
Authors
Jonathan M. Tucker, Erik H. Hauri, Jared P. Marske, Aaron Pietruszka, Michael O Garcia, Frank Trusdell
Living with volcano hazards Living with volcano hazards
Volcanic eruptions are among Earth’s most dramatic and powerful agents of change. Ash, mudflows, and lava flows can devastate communities near volcanoes and cause havoc in areas far downwind, downstream, and downslope. Even when a volcano is quiet, steep volcanic slopes can collapse to become landslides, and large rocks can be hurled by powerful steam blasts. Hazardous volcanic...
Authors
Wendy K. Stovall, Carolyn L. Mastin, Elizabeth G. Westby, Lisa M. Faust
Mini-columns and ghost columns in Columbia river lava Mini-columns and ghost columns in Columbia river lava
The master joints bounding the columns that make up the basal colonnade of large lava flows of the Columbia Plateau are, in places, flanked by sub-horizontal mini-columns that have grown normal to the master joints. The secondary mini-columns grow into the main columns and are clearly younger than them. They are small adjacent to the master joint, but merge together and thicken away from...
Authors
James G. Moore
Diverse late‐stage crystallization and storage conditions in melt domains from the Youngest Toba Tuff revealed by age and compositional heterogeneity in the last increment of accessory phase growth Diverse late‐stage crystallization and storage conditions in melt domains from the Youngest Toba Tuff revealed by age and compositional heterogeneity in the last increment of accessory phase growth
The chemical record contained within the nal increment of growth on crystals is utilized to reveal the dynamics and time- scales of magma assembly and storage before eruption of the cataclysmic 2800 km3 Youngest Toba Tu (YTT), Indonesia. In situ U–Th disequilibrium dates and trace element concentrations were obtained via secondary ionization mass spectrometry (SIMS) on unsectioned and...
Authors
Casey R. Tierney, Mary R. Reid, Jorge A. Vazquez, Craig A. Chesner
Upper mantle earth structure in Africa from full-wave ambient noise tomography Upper mantle earth structure in Africa from full-wave ambient noise tomography
Our understanding of the tectonic development of the African continent and the interplay between its geological provinces is hindered by unevenly distributed seismic instrumentation. In order to better understand the continent, we used long-period ambient noise full waveform tomography on data collected from 186 broadband seismic stations throughout Africa and surrounding regions to...
Authors
Erica L. Emry, Yang Shen, Andrew A. Nyblade, Ashton F. Flinders, Xueyang Bao
AVO-G2S: A modified, open-source Ground-to-Space atmospheric specification for infrasound modeling AVO-G2S: A modified, open-source Ground-to-Space atmospheric specification for infrasound modeling
To facilitate infrasound propagation studies, we present AVO-G2S, an open-source, Ground-to-Space model which provides temperature and wind specifications from the surface to an altitude of 225 km. This model provides a means of smoothly characterizing atmospheric conditions using multiple numerical weather prediction forecast and reanalysis products, along with upper-atmospheric...
Authors
Hans Schwaiger, Alexandra M. Iezzi, David Fee
Assessing seasonal changes in microgravity at Yellowstone caldera Assessing seasonal changes in microgravity at Yellowstone caldera
Microgravity time series at active volcanoes can provide an indication of mass change related to subsurface magmatic processes, but uncertainty is often introduced by hydrologic variations and other noise sources that cannot easily be isolated. We empirically assessed seasonality and noise by conducting four surveys over the course of May-October 2017 at Yellowstone caldera, Wyoming...
Authors
Michael P. Poland, Elske de Zeeuw-van Dalfsen
Digital database of the geologic map of the middle east rift geothermal subzone, Kīlauea Volcano, Hawai‘i Digital database of the geologic map of the middle east rift geothermal subzone, Kīlauea Volcano, Hawai‘i
This database release contains all the information used to produce Geologic Investigations Series I-2614 (https://pubs.usgs.gov/imap/2614/). The main component of this digital release is a geodatabase prepared using ArcGIS, but Esri shapefiles are included as well. Kīlauea is an active shield volcano in the southeastern part of the Island of Hawai‘i. The middle East Rift Zone (MERZ) map...
Authors
Michael H. Zoeller, Frank A. Trusdell, Richard B. Moore
Pre-late Wisconsin valley-glacier erratics between Leavenworth and Peshastin, Wenatchee valley, Washington Pre-late Wisconsin valley-glacier erratics between Leavenworth and Peshastin, Wenatchee valley, Washington
The late Wisconsin Icicle Creek alpine glacier transported tonalite boulders from the Mount Stuart batholith to arcuate end moraines in Icicle valley and Wenatchee valley near Leavenworth. Some previous workers considered sparsely weathered Mount Stuart boulders lying outside these moraines and draped by silt as having been ice rafted in a late Wisconsin lake. But the boulders are more...
Authors
Kelsay M. Stanton, Richard B. Waitt, William Long
Undocumented late 18th- to early 19th-century volcanic eruptions in the Southwest Rift Zone of Kīlauea Volcano, Hawai‘i Undocumented late 18th- to early 19th-century volcanic eruptions in the Southwest Rift Zone of Kīlauea Volcano, Hawai‘i
The historical record of volcanic activity at Kīlauea Volcano on the Island of Hawaiʻi begins with the phreatomagmatic blasts of 1790. Three decades later, in 1823, the first party of non-Hawaiian visitors, organized by the English Reverend William Ellis, reached Kīlauea’s summit. A detailed narrative by Ellis includes an account of an eruption in Kīlauea’s Southwest Rift Zone that...
Authors
Richard W. Hazlett, Tim R. Orr, Steve P. Lundblad
A re-examination of the three most prominent Holocene tephra deposits in western Canada: Bridge River, Mount St. Helens Yn and Mazama A re-examination of the three most prominent Holocene tephra deposits in western Canada: Bridge River, Mount St. Helens Yn and Mazama
Volcanic ash deposits (tephra) in western Canada are instrumental in providing independent chronologic control for many archaeological and paleoenvironmental sites. In Alberta, tephra are a key chronologic tool in a region where radiocarbon dates are often unreliable because of the prevalence of carbonate-rich bedrock and other “old carbon” sources, such as coal. However, many studies...
Authors
Britta J.L. Jensen, Alwynne B. Beaudoin, Michael A. Clynne, Jordan Harvey, James W. Vallance
Snowmelt-triggered earthquake swarms at the margin of Long Valley Caldera, California Snowmelt-triggered earthquake swarms at the margin of Long Valley Caldera, California
Fluids are well known to influence earthquakes, yet rarely are earthquakes convincingly linked to precipitation. Weak modulation or limited data often leads to ambiguous interpretations. In contrast, here we find that shallow seismicity in the Sierra Nevada range near Long Valley Caldera is strongly modulated by snowmelt. Over 33 years, shallow seismicity rates were ~37 times higher...
Authors
Emily K. Montgomery-Brown, David R. Shelly, Paul A. Hsieh