Tag: Volcanology

  • The next massive volcano eruption will cause climate chaos — and we are unprepared

    The next massive volcano eruption will cause climate chaos — and we are unprepared

    [ad_1]

    Cataclysmic volcanic eruptions are rare — but inevitable. Governments should not only work to stem global warming, but also prepare for other extreme events with a planet-wide impact. The 1815 massive eruption of Mount Tambora in Indonesia should ring alarm bells. Imagine if this happened today.

    Around 90,000 people on Sumbawa Island and neighbouring Lombok were killed when Mount Tambora blew. The eruption triggered waves of weather anomalies around the world, which lasted for years and affected millions more people. The Northern Hemisphere cooled by 1 °C and the subsequent year was said to lack a summer. Abnormally cold weather persisted well into 1817 across North America and Europe, resulting in meagre harvests.

    A consequent doubling of grain prices led to societal unrest in countries such as France and the United Kingdom, and plunged the United States into its first economic depression. In India, erratic weather was linked to a cholera outbreak, which spread to become a global pandemic in 1817. The ripple effects of the Tambora eruption resulted in a death toll probably in the tens of millions1,2.

    The Tamboran gloom has faded, and the world has been spared a volcanic eruption of similar magnitude in more than 200 years. Yet the question is not whether such a cataclysm will occur again, but when. Geological evidence from volcanic deposits over the past 60,000 years suggests a 1-in-6 probability of a massive eruption occurring this century3,4.

    If that happened in the next 5 years, the costs would be colossal. In an extreme scenario, the economic impacts would cost more than US$3.6 trillion in the first year and $1.2 trillion more over subsequent years, owing to the effects of extreme weather, reduced crop yields and food instability, according to the insurance and reinsurance market Lloyd’s of London, which assessed these risks in May (see go.nature.com/4ewty2d).

    Those are huge values. But they have large uncertainties attached. Scientists understand the basic mechanisms of how volcanism influences climate, but not the fine details: sulfur dioxide (SO2) is propelled into the stratosphere, where it forms sulfate aerosols that reflect incoming solar radiation and cool Earth’s surface5. The magnitude of cooling depends on the amount, vertical distribution and size of these sulfate aerosol particles6. The effects on rainfall are harder to predict, as are those on agriculture and economic markets. And all of these details will be affected by and have an influence on climate change.

    To pin down these uncertainties, we call for a three-pronged approach. First, researchers should tie in models and geological evidence for past climates with historical volcanic records. Second, they should explore how volcanic cooling might interact with anthropogenic climate warming. And third, scientists, analysts and policymakers need to design strategies for minimizing the effects of a catastrophic eruption, by coupling climate, crop and food-shock models.

    Understand what happened in past eruptions

    Researchers don’t have enough evidence to deduce how much sulfur volcanoes have injected into the atmosphere historically, or what its cooling effects were. Satellites have tracked sulfate emissions from volcanoes since the 1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines. But those from earlier eruptions must be reconstructed on the basis of deposits in ice-core samples from Antarctica and Greenland. Traces are evident from only large eruptions.

    Models are then used to estimate how much reached the stratosphere. But assumptions must be made about the volumes injected, the height of the plume and the size of aerosol particles. Even for the Tambora cataclysm — which was ten times larger than Pinatubo — reconstructed stratospheric sulfate levels vary by up to a factor of 15 between models7.

    The corresponding cooling is also hard to predict. For example, the 5 massive eruptions that released the most sulfur8 in the past 1,500 years all caused a similar amount of summer cooling in the Northern Hemisphere — around 1–1.5 °C for 2–3 years9 — despite the masses of sulfur they released differing by a factor of 3 (see ‘Volcanoes that changed the world’).

    VOLCANOES THAT CHANGED THE WORLD: map and barchart showing how much sulfur dioxide has been released by volcanos over several millennia.

    Source: M. Sigl & M. Toohey PANGAEA https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.971968 (2024).

    Such inconsistencies stem from limitations in researchers’ understanding of the lifecycle of aerosols. For example, bigger eruptions might loft larger particles into the air, which are less efficient at scattering radiation and fall out of the stratosphere faster than smaller ones do, resulting in less cooling. The influence of volcanism on regional climate events, such as El Niño and monsoons, is also poorly understood6,10.

    To fill these gaps, we appeal to international modelling efforts, such as the Volcanic Forcings Model Intercomparison Project, to explore limiting factors. Models should look at a range of sulfur yields as well as aerosol and sulfur chemistry. They should examine how the impacts of eruptions vary in different climates. And they need to better assimilate and integrate ice-core, tree-ring and other data on past climates to improve the accuracy of simulations and predictions.

    Consider volcanic cooling in a warmer world

    Modelling of past eruptions can tell us a lot. But, in a hotter world, many physical and chemical processes in the atmosphere, in oceans and on land will also change. For example, global warming heats the lower atmosphere and cools the stratosphere. Alteration of atmospheric layers will affect how volcanic plumes spread and how high they reach11,12.

    Changes in circulation patterns will also affect how aerosols spread and grow. For example, faster air flows from the tropics to higher latitudes, which are already observed as a consequence of warming, hamper the coagulation of aerosols from eruptions in the tropics. Smaller aerosols scatter sunlight more efficiently and cool Earth’s surface more11.

    The oceans will also be affected. Global warming increases ocean stratification that then acts as a barrier to mixing of deep and shallow waters. Volcanic eruptions might thus disproportionately cool the upper layers of water and the air masses above the ocean.

    Ash and lahar accumulation covering a river valley near the slopes of Mount Pinatubo following its 1991 eruption.

    Ash slurry covered a valley near Mount Pinatubo after it erupted in the Philippines in 1991.Credit Marc Schlossman/Panos Pictures

    And as climate extremes mount — from heavy rainfall to melting ice sheets and sea-level rise — the ramifications of volcanic activity will only grow, making it essential to get a handle on them now. Researchers need to understand how eruptions amplify or dampen anthropogenic climate change11.

    Yet, none of these details is included in current climate models, which assume that volcanism in the twenty-first century will resemble past activity12. Moreover, Tambora’s eruption lies outside the 1850–2014 range of historical volcanic records that feed into standard climate projections, such as the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP6) outputs used in the Sixth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Thus, these simulations both underestimate the effects of volcanism on the climate and the frequency of massive volcanic eruptions.

    We appeal to researchers developing the next generation of climate models (including CMIP7) to build in more-accurate representations of volcanism. They should improve models of historical eruptions not covered by satellite data, future trends in a warming climate and microphysical processes in the stratosphere. In-depth simulations of multiple eruptions in different climate scenarios would widen the range of impacts considered.

    Forecast the socio-economic impacts of a massive cataclysm

    As well as happening in a warmer climate, the next Tambora-like eruption will occur in a more interconnected world that supports eight times the population of 1815. Agricultural systems would suddenly face lower levels of sunlight, cooler weather and altered moisture patterns — all in close succession. Outsized societal impacts might follow.

    For example, the 1991 Pinatubo eruption resulted in a 9% reduction in global maize (corn) yields and a 5% reduction in wheat, rice and soya-bean production13. Crop failures from a more massive eruption would hit global breadbasket regions simultaneously — China, the United States, India, Russia and Brazil, which together produce most of the world’s wheat, maize, rice and soya beans. Loss of harvests would disrupt global food security and supply chains, potentially triggering unrest, conflict and migration.

    Since the 1990s, climate simulations have been coupled to crop models to project the likely impacts of global warming on yields and food trade. Synchronized breadbasket failures have been considered in light of the increasing frequency and intensity of weather extremes14.

    Lava spews from several sites on the Sundhnúkur volcano on the Reykjanes peninsula, Iceland in 2024.

    Lava from the Sundhnúkur volcano near Grindavik, Iceland, in June 2024.Credit: John Moore/Getty

    Yet, comparable analyses are lacking for volcanic eruptions, for which the focus has remained on the effects that medium-scale eruptions such as Pinatubo or climate engineering could have on global agriculture13. This research gap leaves governments and policymakers in the dark.

    We call for a coupling of state-of-the-art climate projections and agricultural models to shed light on this blind spot, ideally through assessments of high-impact cascading shocks by the World Climate Research Programme. Results could be used to assess international trade networks and food reserves to improve understanding, and to predict more-realistic shifts in the global food trade system following major disruptions.

    We acknowledge that such a top-down approach is imperfect and that different sources of uncertainty can intensify and cascade at each step. The timing, location and plume height of the next cataclysmic eruption and the state of the climate at that time will remain unpredictable.

    Because of those multiple unknowns, one cannot rely on conventional ‘predict-then-act’ frameworks, because neither forecasts nor uncertainties can be quantified with precision15. Risk managers — including insurers and reinsurers — cannot simply depend on single, best-guess paths.

    Instead, we call for a definition of robust decision-making approaches and storylines of extremes to explore worst-case scenarios and to link management decisions to the widest possible range of plausible outcomes.

    We recommend a ‘downward counterfactual approach’, which reimagines known past events to construct a realistic view of future risks. For example, by considering a Tambora-scale eruption occurring in today’s climate (perhaps coinciding with an El Niño), insurers and reinsurers could estimate financial losses from systems known to have been affected by past eruptions, such as food trade16.

    Relevant businesses and other large financial institutions should also conduct capital stress tests to explore the macroeconomic consequences of a modern year without a summer. We call for the insurance sector to formally consider the risk posed by a Tambora-like eruption as a ‘compulsory event scenario’ in its realistic-disaster scenarios.

    A massive volcanic eruption is bound to happen one day. Developing robust models and stress tests for such an event must be a priority for societies, governments and the risk industry so that humanity is adequately prepared for a future cataclysm.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Reid, I. & Jackson, H. R. Oceanic spreading rate and crustal thickness. Mar. Geophys. Res. 5, 165–172 (1981).


    Google Scholar
     

  • Bown, J. W. & White, R. S. Variation with spreading rate of oceanic crustal thickness and geochemistry. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 121, 435–449 (1994).

    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Shen, Y. & Forsyth, D. W. Geochemical constraints on initial and final depths of melting beneath mid‐ocean ridges. J. Geophys. Res. Solid Earth 100, 2211–2237 (1995).

    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Dick, H. J. B., Lin, J. & Schouten, H. An ultraslow-spreading class of ocean ridge. Nature 426, 405–412 (2003).

    ADS 
    CAS 
    PubMed 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Cannat, M. How thick is the magmatic crust at slow spreading oceanic ridges? J. Geophys. Res. Solid Earth 101, 2847–2857 (1996).


    Google Scholar
     

  • Conley, M. M. & Dunn, R. A. Seismic shear wave structure of the uppermost mantle beneath the Mohns Ridge. Geochem. Geophys. Geosyst. 12, Q0AK01 (2011).


    Google Scholar
     

  • Corbalán, A. et al. Seismic velocity structure along and across the ultraslow-spreading Southwest Indian Ridge at 64°30′E showcases flipping detachment faults. J. Geophys. Res. Solid Earth 126, e2021JB022177 (2021).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Grevemeyer, I. et al. Episodic magmatism and serpentinized mantle exhumation at an ultraslow-spreading centre. Nat. Geosci. 11, 444–448 (2018).

    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Momoh, E., Cannat, M., Watremez, L., Leroy, S. & Singh, S. C. Quasi‐3‐D seismic reflection imaging and wide‐angle velocity structure of nearly amagmatic oceanic lithosphere at the ultraslow‐spreading Southwest Indian Ridge. J. Geophys. Res. Solid Earth 122, 9511–9533 (2017).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Li, J. et al. Seismic observation of an extremely magmatic accretion at the ultraslow spreading Southwest Indian Ridge. Geophys. Res. Lett. 42, 2656–2663 (2015).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Niu, X. et al. Along‐axis variation in crustal thickness at the ultraslow spreading Southwest Indian Ridge (50°E) from a wide‐angle seismic experiment. Geochem. Geophys. Geosyst. 16, 468–485 (2015).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Minshull, T. A., Muller, M. R. & White, R. S. Crustal structure of the Southwest Indian Ridge at 66°E: seismic constraints. Geophys. J. Int. 166, 135–147 (2006).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Liu, J. et al. Water enrichment in the mid-ocean ridge by recycling of mantle wedge residue. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 584, 117455 (2022).

    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Yu, X. & Dick, H. J. B. Plate-driven micro-hotspots and the evolution of the Dragon Flag melting anomaly, Southwest Indian Ridge. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 531, 116002 (2020).

    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Michael, P. J. et al. Magmatic and amagmatic seafloor generation at the ultraslow-spreading Gakkel ridge, Arctic Ocean. Nature 423, 956–961 (2003).

    ADS 
    CAS 
    PubMed 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Jokat, W. et al. Geophysical evidence for reduced melt production on the Arctic ultraslow Gakkel mid-ocean ridge. Nature 423, 962–965 (2003).

    ADS 
    CAS 
    PubMed 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Minshull, T. A. et al. Crustal structure at the Blake Spur fracture zone from expanding spread profiles. J. Geophys. Res. Solid Earth 96, 9955–9984 (1991).


    Google Scholar
     

  • Canales, J. P., Detrick, R. S., Lin, J., Collins, J. A. & Toomey, D. R. Crustal and upper mantle seismic structure beneath the rift mountains and across a nontransform offset at the Mid‐Atlantic Ridge (35°N). J. Geophys. Res. Solid Earth 105, 2699–2719 (2000).


    Google Scholar
     

  • Dunn, R. A. in Treatise on Geophysics (Second Edition) (ed. Schubert, G.) 419–451 (Elsevier, 2015).

  • Chen, Y. J. Oceanic crustal thickness versus spreading rate. Geophys. Res. Lett. 19, 753–756 (1992).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Christeson, G. L., Goff, J. A. & Reece, R. S. Synthesis of oceanic crustal structure from two‐dimensional seismic profiles. Rev. Geophys. 57, 504–529 (2019).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Dunn, R. A., Lekić, V., Detric, R. S. & Toomey, D. R. Three‐dimensional seismic structure of the Mid‐Atlantic Ridge (35°N): evidence for focused melt supply and lower crustal dike injection. J. Geophys. Res. Solid Earth 110, B09101 (2005).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Hooft, E. E. E., Detrick, R. S., Toomey, D. R., Collins, J. A. & Lin, J. Crustal thickness and structure along three contrasting spreading segments of the Mid‐Atlantic Ridge, 33.5°–35°N. J. Geophys. Res. Solid Earth 105, 8205–8226 (2000).


    Google Scholar
     

  • Jian, H., Singh, S. C., Chen, Y. J. & Li, J. Evidence of an axial magma chamber beneath the ultraslow-spreading Southwest Indian Ridge. Geology 45, 143–146 (2017).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Seher, T. et al. Crustal velocity structure of the Lucky Strike segment of the Mid‐Atlantic Ridge at 37°N from seismic refraction measurements. J. Geophys. Res. Solid Earth 115, B03103 (2010).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Gale, A., Dalton, C. A., Langmuir, C. H., Su, Y. & Schilling, J. The mean composition of ocean ridge basalts. Geochem. Geophys. Geosyst. 14, 489–518 (2013).

    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Yang, A. Y. et al. A subduction influence on ocean ridge basalts outside the Pacific subduction shield. Nat. Commun. 12, 4757 (2021).

    ADS 
    PubMed 
    PubMed Central 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Danyushevsky, L. V., Eggins, S. M., Falloon, T. J. & Christie, D. M. H2O abundance in depleted to moderately enriched mid-ocean ridge magmas; part I: incompatible behaviour, implications for mantle storage, and origin of regional variations. J. Petrol. 41, 1329–1364 (2000).

    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Krein, S. B., Molitor, Z. J. & Grove, T. L. ReversePetrogen: a multiphase dry reverse fractional crystallization-mantle melting thermobarometer applied to 13,589 mid-ocean ridge basalt glasses. J. Geophys. Res. Solid Earth 126, e2020JB021292 (2021).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Hebert, L. B. & Montési, L. G. J. Generation of permeability barriers during melt extraction at mid‐ocean ridges. Geochem. Geophys. Geosyst. 11, Q12008 (2010).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Schlindwein, V. & Schmid, F. Mid-ocean-ridge seismicity reveals extreme types of ocean lithosphere. Nature 535, 276–279 (2016).

    ADS 
    CAS 
    PubMed 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Magde, L. S. & Sparks, D. W. Three‐dimensional mantle upwelling, melt generation, and melt migration beneath segment slow spreading ridges. J. Geophys. Res. Solid Earth 102, 20571–20583 (1997).


    Google Scholar
     

  • Wanless, V. D., Behn, M. D., Shaw, A. M. & Plank, T. Variations in melting dynamics and mantle compositions along the Eastern Volcanic Zone of the Gakkel Ridge: insights from olivine-hosted melt inclusions. Contrib. Mineral. Petrol. 167, 1005 (2014).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Jokat, W., Kollofrath, J., Geissler, W. H. & Jensen, L. Crustal thickness and earthquake distribution south of the Logachev Seamount, Knipovich Ridge. Geophys. Res. Lett. 39, L08302 (2012).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Fialko, Y. A. & Rubin, A. M. Thermodynamics of lateral dike propagation: implications for crustal accretion at slow spreading mid‐ocean ridges. J. Geophys. Res. Solid Earth. 103, 2501–2514 (1998).


    Google Scholar
     

  • Robinson, C. J., Bickle, M. J., Minshull, T. A., White, R. S. & Nichols, A. R. L. Low degree melting under the Southwest Indian Ridge: the roles of mantle temperature, conductive cooling and wet melting. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 188, 383–398 (2001).

    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Cannat, M., Rommevaux‐Jestin, C. & Fujimoto, H. Melt supply variations to a magma‐poor ultra‐slow spreading ridge (Southwest Indian Ridge 61° to 69°E). Geochem. Geophys. Geosyst. 4, 9104 (2003).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Zhou, F. & Dyment, J. Temporal and spatial variation of seafloor spreading at ultraslow spreading ridges: contribution of marine magnetics. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 602, 117957 (2023).

    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Parmentier, E. M. & Morgan, J. P. Spreading rate dependence of three-dimensional structure in oceanic spreading centres. Nature 348, 325–328 (1990).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Sparks, D. W. & Parmentier, E. M. The structure of three‐dimensional convection beneath oceanic spreading centres. Geophys. J. Int. 112, 81–91 (1993).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Hirth, G. & Kohlstedt, D. Rheology of the upper mantle and the mantle wedge: a view from the experimentalists. Geophys. Monogr. 138, 83–106 (2003).

    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Liu, C.-Z. et al. Archean cratonic mantle recycled at a mid-ocean ridge. Sci. Adv. 8, eabn6749 (2022).

    CAS 
    PubMed 
    PubMed Central 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Meyzen, C. M., Toplis, M. J., Humler, E., Ludden, J. N. & Mével, C. A discontinuity in mantle composition beneath the southwest Indian ridge. Nature 421, 731–733 (2003).

    ADS 
    CAS 
    PubMed 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Liu, C.-Z. et al. Ancient, highly heterogeneous mantle beneath Gakkel ridge, Arctic Ocean. Nature 452, 311–316 (2008).

    ADS 
    CAS 
    PubMed 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Kristoffersen, Y., Husebye, E. S., Bungum, H. & Gregersen, S. Seismic investigations of the Nansen Ridge during the FRAM I experiment. Tectonophysics 82, 57–68 (1982).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • White, R. S., Minshull, T. A., Bickle, M. J. & Robinson, C. J. Melt generation at very slow-spreading oceanic ridges: constraints from geochemical and geophysical data. J. Petrol. 42, 1171–1196 (2001).

    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Harding, J. L. et al. Magmatic-tectonic conditions for hydrothermal venting on an ultraslow-spread oceanic core complex. Geology 45, 839–842 (2017).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Dannowski, A. et al. Seismic structure of an oceanic core complex at the Mid‐Atlantic Ridge, 22°19′N. J. Geophys. Res. Solid Earth 115, B07106 (2010).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Vaddineni, V. A., Singh, S. C., Grevemeyer, I., Audhkhasi, P. & Papenberg, C. Evolution of the crustal and upper mantle seismic structure from 0–27 Ma in the equatorial Atlantic Ocean at 2° 43′S. J. Geophys. Res. Solid Earth 126, e2020JB021390 (2021).

    ADS 
    PubMed 
    PubMed Central 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Wang, T., Tucholke, B. E. & Lin, J. Spatial and temporal variations in crustal production at the Mid‐Atlantic Ridge, 25°N–27°30′N and 0–27 Ma. J. Geophys. Res. Solid Earth 120, 2119–2142 (2015).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Ding, W. et al. Submarine wide-angle seismic experiments in the High Arctic: the JASMInE Expedition in the slowest spreading Gakkel Ridge. Geosyst. Geoenviron. 1, 100076 (2022).


    Google Scholar
     

  • Zelt, C. A. & Smith, R. B. Seismic traveltime inversion for 2-D crustal velocity structure. Geophys. J. Int. 108, 16–34 (1992).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Korenaga, J. et al. Crustal structure of the southeast Greenland margin from joint refraction and reflection seismic tomography. J. Geophys. Res. Solid Earth 105, 21591–21614 (2000).


    Google Scholar
     

  • White, R. S., McKenzie, D. & O’Nions, R. K. Oceanic crustal thickness from seismic measurements and rare earth element inversions. J. Geophys. Res. Solid Earth 97, 19683–19715 (1992).


    Google Scholar
     

  • Nikishin, A. M., Gaina, C., Petrov, E. I., Malyshev, N. A. & Freiman, S. I. Eurasia Basin and Gakkel Ridge, Arctic Ocean: crustal asymmetry, ultra-slow spreading and continental rifting revealed by new seismic data. Tectonophysics 746, 64–82 (2018).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Kuo, B.-Y. & Forsyth, D. W. Gravity anomalies of the ridge-transform system in the South Atlantic between 31 and 34.5° S: upwelling centers and variations in crustal thickness. Mar. Geophys. Res. 10, 205–232 (1988).


    Google Scholar
     

  • Lin, J., Purdy, G. M., Schouten, H., Sempere, J.-C. & Zervas, C. Evidence from gravity data for focused magmatic accretion along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. Nature 344, 627–632 (1990).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Wessel, P. et al. The generic mapping tools version 6. Geochem. Geophys. Geosyst. 20, 5556–5564 (2019).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Andersen, O. B., Knudsen, P., Kenyon, S., Holmes, S. & Factor, J. K. in International Association of Geodesy Symposia Vol. 149 (eds Freymueller, J. T. & Sánchez, L.) 77–81 (Springer, 2019).

  • Jakobsson, M. et al. The international bathymetric chart of the Arctic Ocean version 4.0. Sci. Data 7, 176 (2020).

    PubMed 
    PubMed Central 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Behn, M. D., Boettcher, M. S. & Hirth, G. Thermal structure of oceanic transform faults. Geology 35, 307–310 (2007).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Seton, M. et al. A global data set of present-day oceanic crustal age and seafloor spreading parameters. Geochem. Geophys. Geosyst. 21, e2020GC009214 (2020).

    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Carlson, R. L. & Herrick, C. N. Densities and porosities in the oceanic crust and their variations with depth and age. J. Geophys. Res. Solid Earth 95, 9153–9170 (1990).


    Google Scholar
     

  • Christensen, N. I. Serpentinites, peridotites, and seismology. Int. Geol. Rev. 46, 795–816 (2004).


    Google Scholar
     

  • Ma, X., Meert, J. G., Xu, Z. & Yi, Z. Late Triassic intra-oceanic arc system within Neotethys: evidence from cumulate appinite in the Gangdese belt, southern Tibet. Lithosphere 10, 545–565 (2018).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Weis, D. et al. High-precision isotopic characterization of USGS reference materials by TIMS and MC-ICP-MS. Geochem. Geophys. Geosyst. 7, Q08006 (2006).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Zong, T. et al. H2O in basaltic glasses from the slow-spreading Carlsberg Ridge: implications for mantle source and magmatic processes. Lithos 332–333, 274–286 (2019).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Herzberg, C. & Asimow, P. D. PRIMELT3 MEGA.XLSM software for primary magma calculation: peridotite primary magma MgO contents from the liquidus to the solidus. Geochem. Geophys. Geosyst. 16, 563–578 (2015).

    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Heister, T., Dannberg, J., Gassmöller, R. & Bangerth, W. High accuracy mantle convection simulation through modern numerical methods – II: realistic models and problems. Geophys. J. Int. 210, 833–851 (2017).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Kronbichler, M., Heister, T. & Bangerth, W. High accuracy mantle convection simulation through modern numerical methods. Geophys. J. Int. 191, 12–29 (2012).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Zha, C., Zhang, F., Lin, J., Zhang, T. & Tian, J. On the relative importance of buoyancy and thickening of aging lithosphere in mantle upwelling and crustal production beneath global mid-ocean ridge system. J. Geophys. Res. Solid Earth 129, e2023JB028432 (2024).

    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Forsyth, D. W. Crustal thickness and the average depth and degree of melting in fractional melting models of passive flow beneath mid‐ocean ridges. J. Geophys. Res. Solid Earth 98, 16073–16079 (1993).


    Google Scholar
     

  • Zhang, T. Data and Codes of JASMInE_2021. Figshare https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.2555721 (2024).

  • Zhang, T. JASMINE2021_GeochemistryData. Figshare https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.26123878 (2024).

[ad_2]

Source link

  • Deep crustal assimilation during the 2021 Fagradalsfjall Fires, Iceland

    [ad_1]

  • Self, S., Thordarson, T. & Widdowson, M. Gas fluxes from flood basalt eruptions. Elements 1, 283–287 (2005).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Thordarson, T. & Self, S. The Laki (Skaftár fires) and Grímsvötn eruptions in 1783–1785. Bull. Volcanol. 55, 233–263 (1993).

    Article 
    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Carracedo, J. C., Badiola, E. R. & Soler, V. The 1730–1736 eruption of Lanzarote, Canary Islands: a long, high-magnitude basaltic fissure eruption. J. Volcanol. Geotherm. Res. 53, 239–250 (1992).

    Article 
    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Garcia, M. O., Pietruszka, A. J., Rhodes, J. M. & Swanson, K. Magmatic processes during the prolonged Pu’u ’O’o eruption of Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii. J. Petrol. 41, 967–990 (2000).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Bindeman, I. N. et al. Diverse mantle components with invariant oxygen isotopes in the 2021 Fagradalsfjall eruption, Iceland. Nat. Commun. 13, 3737 (2022).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 
    PubMed 
    PubMed Central 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Sigmundsson, F. et al. Deformation and seismicity decline before the 2021 Fagradalsfjall eruption. Nature 609, 523–528 (2022).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 
    PubMed 
    PubMed Central 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Halldórsson, S. A. et al. Rapid shifting of a deep magmatic source at Fagradalsfjall volcano, Iceland. Nature 609, 529–534 (2022).

    Article 
    ADS 
    PubMed 
    PubMed Central 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Schilling, J. G. Iceland mantle plume: geochemical study of Reykjanes Ridge. Nature 242, 565–571 (1973).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Wolfe, C. J., Bjarnason, I., VanDecar, J. C. & Solomon, S. C. Seismic structure of the Iceland mantle plume. Nature 385, 245–247 (1997).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Hilton, D. R., Grönvold, K., Macpherson, C. G. & Castillo, P. R. Extreme 3He/4He ratios in northwest Iceland: constraining the common component in mantle plumes. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 173, 53–60 (1999).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Murton, B. J., Taylor, R. N. & Thirlwall, M. F. Plume–ridge interaction: a geochemical perspective from the Reykjanes Ridge. J. Petrol. 43, 1987–2012 (2022).

    Article 
    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Sæmundsson, K., Sigurgeirsson, M. Á. & Friðleifsson, G. Ó. Geology and structure of the Reykjanes volcanic system, Iceland. J. Volcanol. Geotherm. Res. 391, 106501 (2020).

    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Krmíček, L., Troll, V. R., Galiová, M. V., Thordarson, T. & Brabec, M. Trace element composition in olivine from the 2022 Meradalir eruption of the Fagradalsfjall Fires, SW-Iceland. Czech Polar Rep. 12, 222–231 (2022).


    Google Scholar
     

  • Kahl, M. et al. Deep magma mobilization years before the 2021 CE Fagradalsfjall eruption, Iceland. Geology 51, 184–188 (2023).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Flóvenz, Ó. G. et al. Cyclical geothermal unrest as a precursor to Iceland’s 2021 Fagradalsfjall eruption. Nat. Geosci. 15, 397–404 (2022).

    Article 
    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Day, J. M. D. et al. Mantle source characteristics and magmatic processes during the 2021 La Palma eruption. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 597, 117793 (2022).

    Article 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Hofmann, A. W., Jochum, K. P., Seufert, M. & White, W. M. Nb and Pb in oceanic basalts: new constraints on mantle evolution. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 79, 33–45 (1986).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Macpherson, C. G., Hilton, D. R., Day, J. M. D., Lowry, D. & Grönvold, K. High-3He/4He, depleted mantle and low-δ18O, recycled oceanic lithosphere in the source of central Iceland magmatism. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 233, 411–427 (2005).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Skovgaard, A. C., Storey, M., Baker, J., Blusztajn, J. & Hart, S. R. Osmium–oxygen isotopic evidence for a recycled and strongly depleted component in the Iceland mantle plume. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 194, 259–275 (2001).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Huppert, H. E. & Sparks, R. S. J. Cooling and contamination of mafic and ultramafic magmas during ascent through continental crust. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 74, 371–386 (1985).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Devey, C. W. & Cox, K. G. Relationships between crustal contamination and crystallisation in continental flood basalt magmas with special reference to the Deccan Traps of the Western Ghats, India. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 84, 59–68 (1987).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Day, J. M. D. Hotspot volcanism and highly siderophile elements. Chem. Geol. 341, 50–74 (2013).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Larsen, L. M., Pedersen, A. K., Sundvoll, B. & Frei, R. Alkali picrites formed by melting of old metasomatized lithospheric mantle: Manitdlat Member, Vaigat Formation, Palaeocene of West Greenland. J. Petrol. 44, 3–38 (2003).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Weir, N. R. et al. Crustal structure of the northern Reykjanes Ridge and Reykjanes Peninsula, southwest Iceland. J. Geophys. Res. Solid Earth 106, 6347–6368 (2001).

    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Radu, I. B. et al. Water in clinopyroxene from the 2021 Geldingadalir eruption of the Fagradalsfjall Fires, SW-Iceland. Bull. Volcanol. 85, 31 (2023).

    Article 
    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Day, J. M. D., Walker, R. J. & Warren, J. M. 186Os–187Os and highly siderophile element abundance systematics of the mantle revealed by abyssal peridotites and Os-rich alloys. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 200, 232–254 (2017).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Blusztajn, J., Hart, S. R., Ravizza, G. & Dick, H. J. B. Platinum-group elements and Os isotopic characteristics of the lower oceanic crust. Chem. Geol. 168, 113–122 (2000).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Peucker‐Ehrenbrink, B., Bach, W., Hart, S. R., Blusztajn, J. S. & Abbruzzese, T. Rhenium‐osmium isotope systematics and platinum group element concentrations in oceanic crust from DSDP/ODP Sites 504 and 417/418. Geochem. Geophys. Geosyst. 4, 8911 (2003).

    Article 
    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Foulger, G. R. Older crust underlies Iceland. Geophys. J. Int. 165, 672–676 (2006).

    Article 
    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Torsvik, T. H. et al. Continental crust beneath southeast Iceland. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. 112, E1818–E1827 (2015).

    Article 
    CAS 
    PubMed 
    PubMed Central 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Dale, C. W. et al. Highly siderophile element behaviour accompanying subduction of oceanic crust: whole rock and mineral-scale insights from a high-pressure terrain. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 73, 1394–1416 (2009).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Heinonen, J. S., Luttinen, A. V., Spera, F. J. & Bohrson, W. A. Deep open storage and shallow closed transport system for a continental flood basalt sequence revealed with Magma Chamber Simulator. Contrib. Mineral. Petrol. 174, 1–18 (2019).

    Article 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Gleeson, M. L., Lissenberg, C. J. & Antoshechkina, P. M. Porosity evolution of mafic crystal mush during reactive flow. Nat. Commun. 14, 3088 (2023).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 
    PubMed 
    PubMed Central 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Thirlwall, M. F. et al. Low δ18O in the Icelandic mantle and its origins: evidence from Reykjanes Ridge and Icelandic lavas. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 70, 993–1019 (2006).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Hartley, M. & Maclennan, J. Magmatic densities control erupted volumes in Icelandic volcanic systems. Front. Earth Sci. 6, 29 (2018).

    Article 
    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Condomines, M. et al. Helium, oxygen, strontium and neodymium isotopic relationships in Icelandic volcanics. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 66, 125–136 (1983).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Pedersen, G. B. et al. Lava flow hazard modelling during the 2021 Fagradalsfjall eruption, Iceland: applications of MrLavaLoba. Nat. Hazards Earth Syst. Sci. Discuss. 2022, 1–38 (2022).


    Google Scholar
     

  • Árnadóttir, T., Geirsson, H. & Jiang, W. Crustal deformation in Iceland: plate spreading and earthquake deformation. Jökull 58, 59–74 (2008).

    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Momme, P., Óskarsson, N. & Keays, R. R. Platinum-group elements in the Icelandic rift system: melting processes and mantle sources beneath Iceland. Chem. Geol. 196, 209–234 (2003).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Nicklas, R. W., Brandon, A. D., Waight, T. E., Puchtel, I. S. & Day, J. M. D. High-precision Pb and Hf isotope and highly siderophile element abundance systematics of high-MgO Icelandic lavas. Chem. Geol. 582, 120436 (2021).

    Article 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Day, J. M. D., Peters, B. J. & Janney, P. E. Oxygen isotope systematics of South African olivine melilitites and implications for HIMU mantle reservoirs. Lithos 202, 76–84 (2014).

    Article 
    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Tait, K. T. & Day, J. M. D. Chondritic late accretion to Mars and the nature of shergottite reservoirs. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 494, 99–108 (2018).

    Article 
    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Day, J. M. D., Waters, C. L., Schaefer, B. F., Walker, R. J. & Turner, S. Use of hydrofluoric acid desilicification in the determination of highly siderophile element abundances and Re‐Pt‐Os isotope systematics in mafic‐ultramafic rocks. Geostand. Geoanal. Res. 40, 49–65 (2016).

    Article 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Meisel, T. & Moser, J. Platinum group element and rhenium concentrations in low abundance reference materials. Geostand. Geoanal. Res. 28, 233–250 (2004).

    Article 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Shinotsuka, K. & Suzuki, K. Simultaneous determination of platinum group elements and rhenium in rock samples using isotope dilution inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry after cation exchange separation followed by solvent extraction. Anal. Chim. Acta 603, 129–139 (2007).

    Article 
    CAS 
    PubMed 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Li, J. et al. Determination of platinum-group elements and Re-Os isotopes using ID-ICP-MS and N-TIMS from a single digestion after two-stage column separation. Geostand. Geoanal. Res. 38, 37–50 (2013).

    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Chu, Z. et al. A comprehensive method for precise determination of Re, Os, Ir, Ru, Pt, Pd concentrations and Os isotopic compositions in geological samples. Geostand. Geoanal. Res. 39, 151–169 (2014).

    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Day, J. M. D., Nutt, K. L., Mendenhall, B. & Peters, B. J. Temporally variable crustal contributions to primitive mantle-derived Columbia River Basalt Group magmas. Chem. Geol. 572, 120197 (2021).

    Article 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Durkin, K., Day, J. M. D., Panter, K. S., Xu, J.-F. & Castillo, P. R. Petrogenesis of alkaline magmas across a continent to ocean transect, northern Ross Sea, Antarctica. Chem. Geol. 641, 121780 (2023).

    Article 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Mundl-Petermeier, A. et al. Temporal evolution of primordial tungsten-182 and 3He/4He signatures in the Iceland mantle plume. Chem. Geol. 525, 245–259 (2019).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Martin, C. E. Osmium isotopic characteristics of mantle-derived rocks. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 55, 1421–1434 (1991).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Pegram, W. J. & Allègre, C. J. Osmium isotopic compositions from oceanic basalts. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 111, 59–68 (1992).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Roy-Barman, M. & Allègre, C. J. 187Os/186Os in oceanic island basalts: tracing oceanic crust recycling in the mantle. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 129, 145–161 (1995).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Jackson, M. G. et al. Globally elevated titanium, tantalum, and niobium (TITAN) in ocean island basalts with high 3He/4He. Geochem. Geophys. Geosyst. 9, Q04027 (2008).

    Article 
    ADS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Debaille, V. et al. Primitive off-rift basalts from Iceland and Jan Mayen: Os-isotopic evidence for a mantle source containing enriched subcontinental lithosphere. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 73, 3423–3449 (2009).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Brandon, A. D., Graham, D. W., Waight, T. & Gautason, B. 186Os and 187Os enrichments and high-3He/4He sources in the Earth’s mantle: evidence from Icelandic picrites. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 71, 4570–4591 (2007).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Smit, Y. The Snaefellsnes Transect: A Geochemical Cross-section Through the Iceland Plume. PhD thesis, Open University (2004).

  • Reisberg, L. et al. Os isotope systematics in ocean island basalts. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 120, 149–167 (1993).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Eiler, J. M., Grönvold, K. & Kitchen, N. Oxygen isotope evidence for the origin of chemical variations in lavas from Theistareykir volcano in Iceland’s northern volcanic zone. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 184, 269–286 (2000).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Slater, L., McKenzie, D., Gronvold, K. & Shimizu, N. Melt generation and movement beneath Theistareykir, NE Iceland. J. Petrol. 42, 321–354 (2001).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Breddam, K. Kistufell: primitive melt from the Iceland mantle plume. J. Petrol. 43, 345–373 (2002).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Peate, D. W. et al. Historic magmatism on the Reykjanes Peninsula, Iceland: a snap-shot of melt generation at a ridge segment. Contrib. Mineral. Petrol. 157, 359–382 (2009).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Day, J. M. D., Pearson, D. G., Macpherson, C. G., Lowry, D. & Carracedo, J. C. Evidence for distinct proportions of subducted oceanic crust and lithosphere in HIMU-type mantle beneath El Hierro and La Palma, Canary Islands. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 74, 6565–6589 (2010).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Luguet, A. et al. Enriched Pt-Re-Os isotope systematics in plume lavas explained by metasomatic sulfides. Science 319, 453–456 (2008).

    Article 
    ADS 
    CAS 
    PubMed 

    Google Scholar
     

  • Kempton, P. D. & Hunter, A. G. A Sr-, Nd-, Pb-, O-isotope study of plutonic rocks from MARK, Leg 153: implications for mantle heterogeneity and magma chamber processes. Ocean Drilling Program Scientific Results Leg 153 – Mid-Atlantic Ridge, 305–319 (1997).

  • Coogan, L. A. The lower oceanic crust. Treatise Geochem. 2, 497–541 (2014).

    Article 

    Google Scholar
     

  • [ad_2]

    Source link

  • James Clerk Maxwell’s ode to bubble blowing

    James Clerk Maxwell’s ode to bubble blowing

    [ad_1]

    Nature, Published online: 18 June 2024; doi:10.1038/d41586-024-02028-x

    Curious volcanic activity confounds tourists near Naples, and Maxwell reviews a textbook on bubbles, in the weekly dip into Nature’s archive.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • How volcanoes shaped our planet — and why we need to be ready for the next big eruption

    How volcanoes shaped our planet — and why we need to be ready for the next big eruption

    [ad_1]

    Adventures in Volcanoland: What Volcanoes Tell Us About the World and Ourselves Tamsin Mather Abacus (2024)

    Unlike Alice in Alice in Wonderland, volcanologists cannot fall down a deep rabbit hole to discover what goes on in the bowels of the Earth. Instead, they scour the surface and examine the chemistry of emitted gases, lava and rocks ejected during eruptions. Only by combining many clues can researchers learn where and how molten rock (magma) forms, how it ascends from the mantle below Earth’s crust and what triggers volcanic eruptions.

    In Adventures in Volcanoland, volcanologist Tamsin Mather takes readers on a journey to some of the world’s most notorious and active volcanoes — from Mount Vesuvius in Italy to Masaya in Nicaragua. Her eloquent and enchanting book, which is rich in analogies and anecdotes, weaves together geological, historical and personal stories to explain how volcanoes work, how they have shaped our planet and how they have been understood through history.

    Volcanoes’ captivating power clearly entrances Mather, as it does me. And volcanoes make volcanologists work hard to uncover their secrets. Mather explains how researchers, equipped with the geochemical equivalent of a stethoscope, listen to the beating pulses of volcanoes. Scientists can also capture volcanoes’ ‘breath’ — toxic gases that often enshroud Mather as she works and that eat away at her clothes. Mather describes navigating through thick jungle in Guatemala to collect samples of lava while volcanic blasts hurled plumes of ash into the sky. Repairs to broken equipment had to be improvised using duct tape and superglue. Mather once resorted to using an inverted children’s paddling pool to collect gases fizzing up inside the caldera of Santorini volcano in Greece. The effort is worth it, Mather explains, to help volcanologists to answer big questions, such as how eruptions alter the climate and our environment, and how they affect life on Earth.

    Volcanologists must exploit a vast array of knowledge, from planetary-scale shifts in Earth’s carbon cycle to the analysis of trapped gases in microscopic beads of glass. They must put eruptions in geological context, on timescales from Earth’s formation more than four billion years ago to the rapid radioactive decay of gases emitted by magma (such as radon-222, with a half-life of just under four days).

    Each rock tells a story

    Mather describes human experiences of volcanic eruptions, including her own time spent staring into churning lakes of molten rock, a “roiling, red and restless” fiery sea. She first encountered volcanoes and their hazards as a child, when she visited Vesuvius and the former Roman towns of Pompeii and Herculaneum. In ad 79, several scorching (350–550 ºC), fast-moving clouds of ash, pumice and gases surged down the flanks of Vesuvius, with devastating consequences for the people below, including hundreds who had taken refuge at the waterfront in Herculaneum, waiting to flee by boat.

    Today, tourists standing at the excavated pre-eruption shoreline are presented with an intimidating wall of volcanic deposits. After the eruption, the land surface gained up to 20 metres of elevation, and the coastline moved seawards by one kilometre. And all this happened in a geological blink of an eye.

    Looking down from the crater rim of Mount Vesuvius towards the urban sprawl of metropolitan Naples, now home to around three million people, it’s sobering to consider just how the city will respond to the next large eruption of the slumbering volcano. It’s hard to know when that will be, but managing a future evacuation will be a colossal task for the authorities.

    To prepare and plan, it is essential to better understand the hazards of volcanic regions. By ‘reading the rocks’ deposited by volcanoes, layer upon layer over thousands or millions of years, volcanologists can unravel the frequency, style and magnitudes of past eruptions. For example, rock stripes exposed in the walls of the Santorini caldera reveal how the catastrophic 1600 bc Minoan eruption unfolded; underwater studies of rocks point to other events that were much larger than previously thought. The consequences of another large eruption in the Eastern Mediterranean would be grave.

    Satellite image of the Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha'apai volcano on 24 December 2021, before the eruption on 14 January 2022

    The Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai volcano in the South Pacific.Credit: Maxar via Getty

    Volcanic and sedimentary rocks, along with signals from deposited sulphate in ice cores, hold clues about how eruptions have altered conditions across our planet. The impacts can be temporary or permanent. Plumes of sulphur dioxide gas can trigger short periods of global cooling called volcanic winters, such as the one following the 1815 eruption of Tambora in Indonesia. Lengthy outpourings of lava can form large igneous provinces — huge accumulations of volcanic rocks, such as the Siberian Traps. In the past, such events might have led to significant changes in planetary conditions that affected the course of life on Earth. As Mather points out, four out of the five largest mass extinctions overlapped approximately in time with volcanic activity that formed large igneous provinces, which would have pumped out vast amounts of carbon dioxide over millions of years.

    Plan for big eruptions

    All this raises the question of how prepared we are for the next large-scale volcanic eruption. Not very, I would argue. Humans have short memories — the COVID-19 pandemic showed us that, only 100 years after the severe influenza pandemic that began in 1918, we were still not ready.

    Monitoring of volcanoes has advanced tremendously, with support from satellites in space, but they can still catch us off guard. For example, the powerful 2022 eruption of Hunga Tonga–Hunga Ha‘apai in Tonga was unexpected and had global ramifications. A shockwave and tsunamis reached the coasts of North and South America, resulting in an oil spill and two drownings in Peru. Tsunami warnings and evacuation orders were issued in Japan, and beaches were in Australia. Water vapour launched into the stratosphere by the blast could temporarily boost global temperatures.

    Population growth, technology dependency and the increased complexity of global systems have put the world at catastrophic risk from volcanic eruptions. Today, more than 800 million people in more than 85 countries live within 100 kilometres of an active volcano. An eruption near densely populated areas would have disastrous immediate impacts. Pyroclastic flows — fast-moving mixtures of hot gas, ash and rock fragments — could wipe out entire cities. Metres-thick ash falls would devastate crops and overwhelm power lines, water-treatment facilities, ventilation and heating systems, machinery and more. Farther away, flights might be grounded, power grids and undersea cables could be damaged and food security and supply chains could be affected, spreading economic losses.

    With little regard for international borders, large eruptions’ far-reaching impacts would require a rapid and coordinated national and international response. Yet, global preparedness for the impacts of volcanic eruptions is lacking. There is no international United Nations treaty organization for ‘operational volcanology’ (systematic monitoring of volcanoes and assessment of risk). There’s no global coordination on issuing cross-border volcanic hazard warnings that address the full range of threats: pyroclastic flow, tephra fall (deposits of lofted rock fragments), lava flow, lahar (volcanic mudflow), volcanic gases, rafting pumice, drifting ash, tsunami and lightning.

    Tambora-size eruptions occur somewhere in the world once or twice every millennium on average, and every 400 years in the Asia Pacific region. It’s not a matter of if, but when.

    Adventures in Volcanoland reminds us that we should all keep careful watch on the world’s volcanoes. They are more than alluring natural landmarks. They are powerful drivers of processes on our planet that are crucial to understand. Volcano enthusiasts, those interested in the history of this adventurous science and those questioning our place in the world will find much to enjoy in this absorbing book.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • why the chemistry of this unique crater lake matters

    why the chemistry of this unique crater lake matters

    [ad_1]

    “I first became intrigued by volcanoes as an undergraduate studying analytical chemistry in Yogyakarta, a city on the Indonesian island of Java. Yogyakarta lies in the shadow of Indonesia’s most famous volcano, Merapi. Every morning, I would see Merapi in the distance, a plume of ash rising from its crater. For my studies, I analysed the metal content of the surrounding volcanic soils.

    After graduating, I spent ten years in oil and gas research, but in 2001 I returned to volcano research when I joined the Centre for Volcanology and Geological Hazard Mitigation in Yogyakarta.

    There, my colleagues and I monitor the activity of Indonesia’s volcanoes, and work towards hazard analysis and mitigation. This photograph was taken in September 2023 in the crater of Ijen volcano, in the east of Java. This crater contains the world’s largest acid lake. I’m holding a multiparameter analyser, which measures the acidity, temperature and conductivity of water, along with the total concentration of dissolved solids.

    During that visit, I measured an extreme pH of 0.2 for Ijen’s lake. Its 36 million cubic metres of acidic water could be very dangerous to the surrounding population if there is an eruption. We monitor volcanic activity with geophysical devices such as seismometers, but also through the chemistry in the lake. When the activity changes, so does the chemical composition of the water — as well as its colour, which ranges from white to turquoise blue.

    A few years ago, we would routinely visit Ijen to do tests and take samples. Now, we have installed automatic sensors that send results directly to our laboratory every 5 minutes. Because Indonesia has so many volcanoes, remote monitoring enables us to work much more efficiently than before. But sometimes I miss visiting a volcanic field as unique and beautiful as Ijen.”

    This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • The biologist who built a Faraday cage for a crab

    The biologist who built a Faraday cage for a crab

    [ad_1]

    Nature, Published online: 09 April 2024; doi:10.1038/d41586-024-00919-7

    What every biologist should know about electronics, plus a disturbing outbreak of volcanism in North Carolina, in the weekly dip into Nature’s archive.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Submerged volcano’s eruption was the biggest since the last ice age

    Submerged volcano’s eruption was the biggest since the last ice age

    [ad_1]

    Nature, Published online: 29 February 2024; doi:10.1038/d41586-024-00565-z

    Some 7,300 years ago, the Kikai volcano in Japan produced up to 457 cubic kilometres of ash and other debris.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • underwater clues reveal giant prehistoric eruption

    underwater clues reveal giant prehistoric eruption

    [ad_1]

    One of the world’s most-studied volcanoes turns out to be hiding plenty of secrets. Geologists have unearthed major clues about past eruptions of the Greek island of Santorini by drilling into the sea floor around the partially submerged volcano.

    Santorini is famous among volcanologists for its Bronze Age eruption in approximately 1600 bc, which might have contributed to the decline of the Minoan civilization on the island of Crete. Santorini is also home to more than 15,000 residents and attracts around 2 million tourists each year, who instagram their way around the white- and blue-washed buildings set against the glittering sea.

    During an expedition between late 2022 and early 2023, researchers discovered evidence of a previously unknown cataclysm. Half a million years ago, the volcano erupted violently enough to blanket three nearby islands in debris, and it sent underwater currents racing for 70 kilometres. The eruption was much larger than the one in 1600 bc and was one of the biggest ever in this part of the Mediterranean.

    The expedition also pulled up evidence that Santorini erupted in the year ad 726 in a blast approximately the size of Mount St Helens’ in Washington in 1980.

    No one had understood the scale and scope of these eruptions until now. “The history of Santorini is being written again,” says Paraskevi Nomikou, a marine geologist at the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens in Greece, who was a researcher on the expedition.

    Although scientists aren’t expecting similar eruptions to happen any time soon, the findings add to the growing understanding of the volcanic risk at Santorini, which last erupted in 1950. A related volcano, Kolumbo, lies underwater just 7 kilometres away; it last erupted in 1650 and is also considered active. Both Santorini and Kolumbo are part of the Hellenic volcanic arc, a chain of mostly underwater volcanoes that sit at the junction where the plate of Earth’s crust that carries Africa dives beneath the Aegean Sea plate.

    With its explosive history and thriving tourist trade, Santorini is one of the most hazardous volcanoes in Europe. Researchers have pieced together much of its eruptive past, by gathering evidence from rocks on land and from cores that could be obtained fairly easily from the top few metres of the Mediterranean sea floor. But part of Santorini’s history is buried deep beneath the sea floor and had remained inaccessible.

    That is, until the drill ship JOIDES Resolution arrived in December 2022 for a 2-month expedition; the researchers drilled 12 holes into the sea floor and pulled up long cores of sediment and rock in and around Santorini and Kolumbo (see ‘Eruption clues’). “By going into the marine realm we can go further back in time,” says Timothy Druitt, a volcanologist at the University of Clermont Auvergne in Clermont-Ferrand, France, and co-chief scientist of the expedition.

    Eruption clues. Map showing the locations of drill sites around Santorini.

    Sources: Elevation: NASA; Bathymetry: EMODnet

    The drilling around Santorini wasn’t easy; several of the drill holes collapsed in a slurry of pumice and ash, which glommed onto drilling equipment like superglue. At one point, on New Year’s Eve, technicians had to sever the pipe used for drilling, leaving some of it in the hole.

    The many drilling challenges meant that “we had several days where we were just sitting there not knowing what to expect for the next days”, says Steffen Kutterolf, a volcanologist at the GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research in Kiel, Germany, and the expedition’s other co-chief scientist. But ultimately, the team extracted an unprecedented data set about the region’s volcanic past.

    Some of that volcanic past involved submarine eruptions, in which most of the volcanic debris never reaches above the ocean surface. Learning about these eruptions is important because they can be powerful and are poorly understood: in January 2022, an underwater volcano exploded near Tonga in the most violent eruption in decades, yet nearly all of the evidence that it happened remains beneath the waves.

    Among the most significant discoveries at Santorini was a thick layer of the volcanic rock called tuff, which kept appearing in core after core, created by a huge prehistoric eruption. “Slowly it began to dawn on us that this was a major [geological] unit we didn’t know anything about,” says Druitt. The researchers named it the Archaeos tuff, after the Greek word for ‘ancient’. It formed around 520,000 years ago when Santorini erupted underwater, sending shards of ash and rock racing outwards like giant avalanches, the team reported in January in Communications Earth & Environment1.

    As measured by the size of those underwater flows, the eruption was 6 times larger than the 1600 bc eruption at Santorini and 10 times larger than the 2022 Tonga eruption. But Druitt says not to worry about such an ancient eruption: “There’s absolutely no reason to think that Santorini is going to do anything like this in the near future.”

    More relevant to modern hazards is the discovery of how big the eruption in ad 726 was. Historical accounts relate that “the sea was seen to boil” that year, and that large blocks of pumice — lightweight rocks that often form during underwater eruptions — floated to the surface and travelled for hundreds of kilometres. But researchers had little information about the scale and nature of the eruption, Jonas Preine, a marine geophysicist at the University of Hamburg in Germany, said in December at a meeting of the American Geophysical Union in San Francisco. With the JOIDES Resolution, he said, the team aimed to “solve a historic mystery and find a lost eruption”.

    The JOIDES Resolution ship in the Santorini Caldera, taken with a drone.

    The JOIDES Resolution drill ship in Santorini.Credit: Thomas Ronge/IODP

    The researchers did this by comparing rocks drilled during the expedition with information about the layering in the rocks beneath Santorini that comes from studies of seismic waves passing beneath the island. Preine and his colleagues concluded that they had indeed found widespread evidence of an eruption in ad 7262.

    “The 726 eruption has always been used as a worst-case scenario” for a modern eruption at Santorini, says Druitt. “What’s interesting is, the worst-case scenario has just increased in magnitude quite a lot.” Among other things, Preine’s team found that the material from the ad 726 eruption is crumbly, meaning that a future eruption could destabilize that layer and lead to greater chances of underwater landslides, which could trigger tsunamis.

    The ocean-drilling expedition has added important chapters to the scientific understanding of Santorini, says Emilie Hooft, a geophysicist at the University of Oregon in Eugene, who did not go on the expedition but who has been working to map the magma chambers beneath Santorini and Kolumbo3. “The history of the volcano was perceived to be so well known from all the work that was done on land,” she says. And yet “there’s actually a lot to be discovered about the interaction with the eruptive system and the marine environment” — such as how those crumbly layers formed during the underwater eruption in ad 726.

    Greek authorities regularly monitor geological activity at Santorini, by tracking earthquakes, movement of the ground and other changes. The JOIDES Resolution expedition was a high-profile chance to inform residents about the volcano’s hazards, says Nomikou, who was born and raised on the island. She gave talks and virtual tours to school groups about how researchers are monitoring Santorini and neighbouring volcanoes. “There is no need for panic,” she says.

    Although magma continues to pool beneath Santorini, it also leaks out in minor eruptions such as those in the 1920s through to the 1940s that created small lava flows on uninhabited islands. The magma leakage takes some of the pressure off the system, Druitt says. Still, in 2011 and 2012, a months-long period of small earthquakes and ground shifts rattled Santorini, frightening the public and triggering emergency authorities to research evacuation scenarios. And the growing understanding of the threat of submarine eruptions means that researchers need to keep a particular eye on Kolumbo. Its crater floor is around 500 metres below sea level but the rim is around 20 metres beneath the waves.

    Kolumbo’s last eruption, in 1650, generated poisonous gases that killed around 70 people and many animals on Santorini. But Kolumbo is now monitored better than ever; over the past year, Nomikou has led an effort to install geochemical, seismic and other instruments on the sea floor around the volcano4. Early results show that Kolumbo has more than 300 active volcanic chimneys that spew carbon dioxide into the surrounding waters.

    “It’s a very toxic environment,” says Nomikou. And that’s why she spends so much time educating people on Santorini about its unique risks: “They need to know that they are living in an active volcano.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link