4.7 Article

Insights on Hydrothermal - Magmatic Interactions and Eruptive Processes at Poas Volcano (Costa Rica) From High - Frequency Gas Monitoring and Drone Measurements

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 46, Issue 3, Pages 1293-1302

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2018GL080301

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Costa Rican Ley Transitorio [8933]
  2. Deep Carbon Observatory DECADE project
  3. Biology Meets Subduction project [G-2016-7206]

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Identification of unambiguous signals of volcanic unrest is crucial in hazard assessment. Processes leading to phreatic and phreatomagmatic eruptions remain poorly understood, inhibiting effective eruption forecasting. Our 5-year gas record from Poas volcano, combined with geophysical data, reveals systematic behavior associated with hydrothermal-magmatic eruptions. Three eruptive episodes are covered, each with distinct geochemical and geophysical characteristics. Periods with larger eruptions tend to be associated with stronger excursions in monitoring data, particularly in SO2/CO2 and SO2 flux. The explosive 2017 phreatomagmatic eruption was the largest eruption at Poas since 1953 and was preceded by dramatic changes in gas and geophysical parameters. The use of drones played a crucial role in gas monitoring during this eruptive period. Hydrothermal sealing and volatile accumulation, followed by top-down reactivation of a shallow previously emplaced magma body upon seal failure, are proposed as important processes leading to and contributing to the explosivity of the 2017 eruption.

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