There
is nothing quite so compelling as the glacial slowness of geology. Uniformatism is the natural theory of Earthly
creation. Then once in a while we are
reminded that it ain’t so. When she
moves, mere humanity is well advised to gat out of town.
Now
we learn that the deep movement of lavas can actually be as quick as you like. That makes every weak spot a potential major
disaster whose probability however low is not zero. Worse, it can develop into something awful
literally in days and well before all the monitoring gear is in place to track
what is happening.
Imagine
a deep movement under Vesuvius stirring it up and then suddenly spurting for
the surface. My point is that we must
not trust our own instincts here that are based on deep history.
Highway
from Hell' Fed Deadly Volcano
By
Becky Oskin, Staff Writer
July
31, 2013
Molten rock from Earth's hellishly hot mantle can punch through miles of
overlying crust in a matter of months, a new study finds.
Before the deadly 1963
eruption of Irazú volcano in Costa Rica, magma surged 22 miles
(35 kilometers) in about two months, traveling from the mantle to the volcano's
shallow magma chamber, researchers report in the Aug. 1 issue of the journal
Nature. The evidence comes from geochemical tests on crystals of the mineral olivine
from ash erupted in 1963. Layers in the crystals helped re-create the magma's pre-eruption journey.
"We refer to our
story as the 'highway from hell,'" said Phillip Ruprecht, lead study
author and a volcanologist at Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth
Observatory in New York.
The
discovery at Irazú helps confirm other clues for high-speed magma ascents, such
as deep-seated earthquakes before eruptions at Mount Pinatubo in the
Philippines and Iceland's Eyjafjallajökull volcano, the researchers said.
Seismic tremors struck near the mantle below Pinatubo and Eyjafjallajökull in
the weeks and months before the blasts. And other geochemical tracers in lava
also suggest magma could shoot to the surface from the mantle in mere months.
But
the new study is the first hard evidence of a fast mode in volcanoes, Ruprecht
said.
Skipping
the stairs
Despite
some clues suggesting speedy magma ascents, most models of volcano plumbing
were akin to a slow pipe. A volcano's magma chamber fills from the bottom, like
a sink filling from its drain. Many pulses of molten rock can pump into the
chamber during a volcano's lifetime. Based on geochemical evidence in lava,
researchers thought the magma melts would rise a bit, mix together, and then climb a little more, until finally reaching
the chamber. The long journey happens over a span of thousands to hundreds of
thousands of years.
"It's
like going up a set of stairs. Each step is another change," said Adam
Kent, a geologist at Oregon State University who was not involved in the study.
"By the time you get to the surface, the magma has been changed quite
substantially."
But
the new study found evidence that magma feeding the 1963 eruption skipped the
stairs and took the express elevator to the surface, mixing with other molten rock
only at shallow depths, around 6 miles (10 kilometers) below the Earth's
surface.
"This
is telling us some interesting stuff about what's driving these volcanoes,
which is hot stuff coming from deep within the mantle," Kent told
LiveScience's OurAmazingPlanet. "The real proof of the pudding would be to
find this behavior at many different places," he said.
Does
this mean that monitoring volcanoes for
earthquakes more than 10 miles
deep could provide early warning of impending eruptions? Not for every volcano,
the researchers said.
Potential
for eruption forecasting
Irazú
volcano is an arc volcano, rising above a subduction zone where two of Earth's tectonic plates collide and
one dives into the mantle. Some of the most massive eruptions in history came
from arc volcanoes in the Pacific Ocean's "Ring of Fire," which tower above subduction zones.
Ruprecht
and co-author Terry Plank are now analyzing olivine crystals from other arc
volcanoes — including those in Alaska's Aleutian Islands, Chile and Tonga — for
signs of fast-rising magma. "It's clearly in every arc we've looked in.
[But] in terms of an arc setting, I don't think every second volcano will have
it. It will be fewer than that," Ruprecht said. Looking at more volcanoes
will also help researchers understand why some melts are rabbit-quick, while
others rise like tortoises.
But
most monitoring systems are laid out to look at shallow depths (6 miles, or 10
km), where magma and hot fluids force
their way upward before an eruption,
so new networks would have to be built to monitor the deeper goings-on. (These
systems currently provide weeks to months of warning before an eruption.) And
volcanologists would need to figure out how to predict eruptions from deep
earthquakes without too many false alarms.
"Perhaps
at volcanoes like Irazú and others like it, you could focus part of your
efforts on looking for these deep signatures and know that in at least a year,
you could expect an eruption," Kent said. "That's pretty useful from
a hazards evaluation standpoint, but trying to figure out when a volcano might
next erupt is a very risky game and very difficult to do."
Email Becky Oskin or follow her @beckyoskin. Follow us @OAPlanet,Facebook & Google+. Original article on LiveScience's
OurAmazingPlanet.
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