Publications
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Geologic field-trip guide of volcaniclastic sediments from snow- and ice-capped volcanoes—Mount St. Helens, Washington, and Mount Hood, Oregon Geologic field-trip guide of volcaniclastic sediments from snow- and ice-capped volcanoes—Mount St. Helens, Washington, and Mount Hood, Oregon
This field guide for the International Association of Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth’s Interior (IAVCEI) Scientific Assembly 2017 focuses on volcaniclastic sediments from Mount St. Helens in Washington and Mount Hood in Oregon. The trip spends four days in the field and includes nine stops at each volcano. For completeness, this guidebook also includes sixteen optional stops in...
Authors
Thomas C. Pierson, Lee Siebert, Christopher J. Harpel, Kevin M. Scott
Deep fluid pathways beneath Mammoth Mountain, California, illuminated by migrating earthquake swarms Deep fluid pathways beneath Mammoth Mountain, California, illuminated by migrating earthquake swarms
Although most volcanic seismicity is shallow (within several kilometers of the surface), some volcanoes exhibit deeper seismicity (10 to 30+ km) that may reflect active processes such as magma resupply and volatile transfer. One such volcano is Mammoth Mountain, California, which has also recently exhibited high rates of CO2 discharge at the surface. We perform high-resolution earthquake...
Authors
Alicia J. Hotovec-Ellis, David R. Shelly, David P. Hill, Andrew M. Pitt, Phillip B. Dawson, Bernard A. Chouet
Near-solidus melts of MORB + 4 wt% H2O at 0.8 – 2.8 GPa applied to issues of subduction magmatism and continent formation Near-solidus melts of MORB + 4 wt% H2O at 0.8 – 2.8 GPa applied to issues of subduction magmatism and continent formation
Experiments on MORB + 4 wt% H2O at 0.8–2.8 GPa and 700–950 °C (Liu in High pressure phase equilibria involving the amphibolite–eclogite transformation. PhD dissertation, Stanford University, Stanford, California, 1997; Liu et al. in Earth Planet Sci Lett 143:161–171, 1996) were reexamined for their major and trace element melt compositions and melting relations. Degree of melting...
Authors
Thomas W. Sisson, Peter B. Kelemen
Eruptive history of Middle Sister, Oregon Cascades-Product of a late Pleistocene eruptive episode Eruptive history of Middle Sister, Oregon Cascades-Product of a late Pleistocene eruptive episode
New mapping, geochemistry, and argon geochronology illuminate a brief, remarkably silicic episode set in a mafic segment of the Cascade arc. Middle Sister was constructed during a 35-k.y. episode in the late Pleistocene from mafic, intermediate, and silicic eruptions adjacent to the primarily rhyolitic South Sister. Eruptions in the Three Sisters volcanic cluster prior to 50 ka were...
Authors
Andrew T. Calvert, Judith E. Fierstein, Wes Hildreth
Seismic evidence for significant melt beneath the Long Valley Caldera, California, USA Seismic evidence for significant melt beneath the Long Valley Caldera, California, USA
A little more than 760 ka ago, a supervolcano on the eastern edge of California (United States) underwent one of North America's largest Quaternary explosive eruptions. Over this ~6-day-long eruption, pyroclastic flows blanketed the surrounding ~50 km with more than 1400 km3 of the now-iconic Bishop Tuff, with ashfall reaching as far east as Nebraska. Collapse of the volcano's magma...
Authors
Ashton F. Flinders, David R. Shelly, Phillip B. Dawson, David P. Hill, Barbara Tripoli, Yang Shen
Volcanic eruptions and threats to respiratory health Volcanic eruptions and threats to respiratory health
In early May 2018, Kīlauea volcano became increasingly active, posing an increase in threat to respiratory health. The emission of gases such as sulfur dioxide from Kīlauea produces large amounts of respirable acid particles as the gases react with water vapor and sunlight, resulting in a visible haze called “vog”. Additionally, the lava lake at Kīlauea’s summit crater has fallen...
Authors
W. Graham Carlos, Jane E. Gross, Shazia Jamil, Charles S. Dela Cruz, David Damby, Elizabeth K. Tam
Timescales of magmatic differentiation from alkali basalt to trachyte within the Harrat Rahat volcanic field, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Timescales of magmatic differentiation from alkali basalt to trachyte within the Harrat Rahat volcanic field, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
A fundamental goal of igneous petrology is to quantify the duration of time required to produce evolved magmas following influx of basalt into the crust. However, in many cases, complex field relations and/or the presence of a long-lived magmatic system make it difficult to assess how basaltic inputs relate to more evolved magmas, therefore, precluding calculation of meaningful...
Authors
Mark E. Stelten, Drew T. Downs, Hannah R. Dietterich, Gail A. Mahood, Andrew T. Calvert, Thomas W. Sisson, Hani M. Zahran, Jamal Shawali
Hydrothermal discharge from the El Tatio basin, Atacama, Chile Hydrothermal discharge from the El Tatio basin, Atacama, Chile
El Tatio in northern Chile is one of the best-studied geothermal fields in South America. However, there remain open questions about the mass and energy budgets, water recharge rates and residence time in the subsurface, origin of dissolved solutes, and processes affecting the phase and chemical composition of groundwater and surface water. We measured and sampled surface manifestations...
Authors
Carolina Munoz-Saez, Michael Manga, Shaul Hurwitz
Caldera life-cycles of the Yellowstone hotspot track: Death and rebirth of the Heise Caldera Caldera life-cycles of the Yellowstone hotspot track: Death and rebirth of the Heise Caldera
As one of the most geochemically unique drill cores recovered within the Yellowstone–Snake River Plain (YSRP) province, the Sugar City geothermal test well was drilled into intra-caldera rhyolite lavas and tuffs erupted during the middle to late Pliocene and the resurgent basaltic volcanism erupted during the Pleistocene. This sequence parallels the two main stages proposed for YSRP...
Authors
Marlon M. Jean, Eric H. Christiansen, Duane E. Champion, Scott K. Vetter, William M. Phillips, Stephan Schuth, John W. Shervais
Prevalence of seismic rate anomalies preceding volcanic eruptions in Alaska Prevalence of seismic rate anomalies preceding volcanic eruptions in Alaska
Seismic rate increases often precede eruptions at volcanoes worldwide. However, many eruptions occur without such precursors. Additionally, identifying seismic rate increases near volcanoes with high levels of background seismicity is non-trivial and many periods of elevated seismicity occur without ensuing eruptions, limiting their usefulness for forecasting in some cases. Although...
Authors
Jeremy D. Pesicek, John Wellik, Stephanie Prejean, Sarah E. Ogburn
Linking the Ukinrek 1977 maar-eruption observations to the tephra deposits: New insights into maar depositional processes Linking the Ukinrek 1977 maar-eruption observations to the tephra deposits: New insights into maar depositional processes
The Ukinrek Maars erupted 30 March to 9 April 1977, forming two maars, a line of small pit craters and a tephra blanket extending to ~2 km from the vents. We combine photographic and written observations with stratigraphic analysis to reconstruct the eruption. The eruption began with very low (a few meters high) fountaining from small craters above an inferred east-west-trending dike...
Authors
Michael Ort, Nathalie Lefebvre, Christina A. Neal, Vicki McConnell, Ken Wohletz
Towards coordinated regional multi-satellite InSAR volcano observations: Results from the Latin America pilot project Towards coordinated regional multi-satellite InSAR volcano observations: Results from the Latin America pilot project
Within Latin America, about 319 volcanoes have been active in the Holocene, but 202 of these volcanoes have no seismic, deformation or gas monitoring. Following the 2012 Santorini Report on satellite Earth Observation and Geohazards, the Committee on Earth Observation Satellites (CEOS) developed a 4-year pilot project (2013-2017) to demonstrate how satellite observations can be used to...
Authors
Matthew Pritchard, Juliet Biggs, Christelle Wauthier, Eugenio Sansosti, David W. D. Arnold, Francisco Delgado, Susanna Ebmeier, Scott Henderson, Kristen Stephens, C. Cooper, Kendall Wnuk, Falk Amelung, Victor Rivera Aguilar, Patricia Mothes, Orlando Macedo, Luis E. Lara, Michael P. Poland, Simona Zoffoli