4.7 Article

Explosivity of basaltic lava fountains is controlled by magma rheology, ascent rate and outgassing

Journal

EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
Volume 553, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.epsl.2020.116658

Keywords

basalt; magma ascent; lava fountain; explosive eruption; effusive eruption; fragmentation

Funding

  1. RCUK NERC DisEqm project [NE/N018575/1]
  2. US NSF [EAR-1642569]
  3. NERC [come30001, NE/N018575/1, NE/N018567/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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The study uses a numerical model to investigate the controls on basaltic eruption style, focusing on Kilauea and Etna as case studies. Results suggest that lava fountaining is a distinct style, separate from effusive and explosive eruption styles. High lava fountains occur when the bubbly magma's Reynolds number is greater than approximately 0.1 and the bulk viscosity is less than 10(6) Pas.
The dichotomy between explosive volcanic eruptions, which produce pyroclasts, and effusive eruptions, which produce lava, is defined by the presence or absence of fragmentation during magma ascent. For lava fountains the distinction is unclear, since the liquid phase in the rising magma may remain continuous to the vent, fragment in the fountain, then re-weld on deposition to feed rheomorphic lava flows. Here we use a numerical model to constrain the controls on basaltic eruption style, using Kilauea and Etna as case studies. Based on our results, we propose that lava fountaining is a distinct style, separate from effusive and explosive eruption styles, that is produced when magma ascends rapidly and fragments above the vent, rather than within the conduit. Sensitivity analyses of Kilauea and Etna case studies show that high lava fountains (>50 m high) occur when the Reynolds number of the bubbly magma is greater than similar to 0.1, the bulk viscosity is less than 10(6) Pas, and the gas is well-coupled to the melt. Explosive eruptions (Plinian and sub-Plinian) are predicted over a wide region of parameter space for higher viscosity basalts, typical of Etna, but over a much narrower region of parameter space for lower viscosity basalts, typical of Kilauea. Numerical results show also that the magma that feeds high lava fountains ascends more rapidly than the magma that feeds explosive eruptions, owing to its lower viscosity. For the Kilauea case study, waning ascent velocity is predicted to produce a progressive evolution from high to weak fountaining, to ultimate effusion; whereas for the Etna case study, small changes in parameter values lead to transitions to and from explosive activity, suggesting that eruption transitions may occur with little warning. (C) 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.

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