Evolving magma temperature and volatile contents over the 2008-2018 summit eruption of Kīlauea Volcano

Magma rheology and volatile contents exert primary and highly nonlinear controls on volcanic activity. Subtle changes in these magma properties can modulate eruption style and hazards, making in situ inference of their temporal evolution vital for volcano monitoring. Here, we study thousands of impu...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inScience advances Vol. 8; no. 22; p. eabm4310
Main Authors Crozier, Josh, Karlstrom, Leif
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Association for the Advancement of Science 03.06.2022
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Summary:Magma rheology and volatile contents exert primary and highly nonlinear controls on volcanic activity. Subtle changes in these magma properties can modulate eruption style and hazards, making in situ inference of their temporal evolution vital for volcano monitoring. Here, we study thousands of impulsive magma oscillations within the shallow conduit and lava lake of Kīlauea Volcano, Hawai'i, USA, over the 2008-2018 summit eruptive sequence, encoded by "very-long-period" seismic events and ground deformation. Inversion of these data with a petrologically informed model of magma dynamics reveals significant variation in temperature and highly disequilibrium volatile contents over days to years, within a transport network that evolved over the eruption. Our results suggest a framework for inferring subsurface magma dynamics associated with prolonged eruptions in near real time that synthesizes petrologic and geophysical volcano monitoring approaches.
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Present address: U.S. Geological Survey California Volcano Observatory Moffett Field, CA, USA.
ISSN:2375-2548
2375-2548
DOI:10.1126/sciadv.abm4310