4.7 Article

Three-dimensional displacements of a large volcano flank movement during the May 2010 eruptions at Pacaya Volcano, Guatemala

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 44, Issue 1, Pages 135-142

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2016GL071402

Keywords

Pacaya Volcano; three-dimensional (3-D) displacements; pixel offsets; synthetic aperture radar (SAR); volcano instability

Funding

  1. NASA Earth and Space Science Fellowships Program [NNX13AO50H]
  2. NASA Earth Surface and Interior Program [NNX14AQ95G]
  3. Shuler-Foscue Endowment at Southern Methodist University
  4. NASA [NNX14AQ95G, 674172] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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Although massive flank failure is fairly common in the evolution of volcanoes, measurements of flank movement indicative of instability are rare. Here 3-D displacements from airborne radar amplitude images derived using an amplitude image pixel offset tracking technique show that the west and southwest flanks of Pacaya Volcano in Guatemala experienced large (similar to 4m), discrete landsliding that was ultimately aborted. Pixel offset tracking improved measurement recovery by nearly 50% over classic interferometric synthetic aperture radar techniques, providing unique measurements at the event. The 3-D displacement field shows that the flank moved coherently downslope along a complex failure surface involving both rotational and along-slope movement. Notably, the lack of continuous movement of the slide in the years leading up to the event emphasizes that active movement should not always be expected at volcanoes for which triggering factors (e.g., magmatic intrusions and eruptions) could precipitate sudden major flank instability.

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