4.6 Article

Source models of long-period seismic events at Galeras volcano, Colombia

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL
Volume 227, Issue 3, Pages 2137-2155

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/gji/ggab325

Keywords

South America; Acoustic properties; Earthquake source observations; Volcano seismology; Eruption mechanisms and flow emplacement; Magma migration and fragmentation

Funding

  1. Science and Technology Research Partnership for Sustainable Development (SATREPS) project for Colombia - Japan Science and Technology Agency (JST)
  2. Science and Technology Research Partnership for Sustainable Development (SATREPS) project for Colombia - Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA)
  3. JSPS KAKENHI Grant [19K04050]
  4. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [19K04050] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The study investigates the mechanism of LP seismic events at Galeras volcano in Colombia, revealing differences in characteristics between NLP and BLP events which are associated with parameters of magma cracks and gas emissions. The research suggests that the evolution of magma plug properties controls the occurrences of BLP and NLP events at the volcano.
Long-period (LP) seismic events have occurred repeatedly at Galeras volcano, Colombia, during the transition from effusive dome formation to explosive Vulcanian eruptions. Since 1989, two types of LP events have been observed there: one characterized by long-lasting, decaying harmonic oscillations (NLP events) and the other by non-harmonic oscillatory features (BLP events). NLP events are attributed to resonances of a dusty gas-filled crack in the magma plugging the eruptive conduit. Sixteen episodes of NLP events occurred at Galeras during 1992-2010, each characterized by systematic temporal variations in the frequencies and quality factors of NLP events. Our and previous estimates of crack model parameters during three of those NLP episodes indicate that the similar temporal variations in crack geometry and fluid properties can be explained by an increase in the ash content within the crack and a decrease in crack volume. We found that NLP events, associated with low SO2 fluxes, are anticorrelated with BLP events, which are accompanied by high SO2 emissions. From our observations and analytical results, we inferred that BLP events are generated by resonances of open cracks in the uppermost magma plug, corresponding to tuffisite veins, that efficiently transfer volcanic gases. After sufficient degassing and densification, the magma plug effectively seals the conduit. The growing overpressure in the deeper magma is then released through a shear fracture along the conduit margin. The intrusion of deeper, vesiculated magma into the shear fracture depressurizes and fragments the magma, producing a dusty gas and triggering the crack resonances that generate NLP events. Our results thus indicate that the evolution of the properties of the magma plug controls the occurrences of BLP and NLP events at Galeras. Although NLP events do not always precede explosive eruptions, they indicate that an important overpressure is building in the shallow conduit.

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