4.2 Article

The 2005 eruption of Sierra Negra volcano, Galapagos, Ecuador

Journal

BULLETIN OF VOLCANOLOGY
Volume 70, Issue 6, Pages 655-673

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00445-007-0160-3

Keywords

caldera; basalt; Galapagos; tephra; lava flow emplacement; volcano deformation; magma chamber processes

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Sierra Negra volcano began erupting on 22 October 2005, after a repose of 26 years. A plume of ash and steam more than 13 km high accompanied the initial phase of the eruption and was quickly followed by a similar to 2-km-long curtain of lava fountains. The eruptive fissure opened inside the north rim of the caldera, on the opposite side of the caldera from an active fault system that experienced an m(b) 4.6 earthquake and similar to 84 cm of uplift on 16 April 2005. The main products of the eruption were an a a flow that ponded in the caldera and clastigenic lavas that flowed down the north flank. The a a flow grew in an unusual way. Once it had established most of its aerial extent, the interior of the flow was fed via a perched lava pond, causing inflation of the a a. This pressurized fluid interior then fed pahoehoe breakouts along the margins of the flow, many of which were subsequently overridden by a a, as the crust slowly spread from the center of the pond and tumbled over the pahoehoe. The curtain of lava fountains coalesced with time, and by day 4, only one vent was erupting. The effusion rate slowed from day 7 until the eruption's end two days later on 30 October. Although the caldera floor had inflated by similar to 5 m since 1992, and the rate of inflation had accelerated since 2003, there was no transient deformation in the hours or days before the eruption. During the 8 days of the eruption, GPS and InSAR data show that the caldera floor deflated similar to 5 m, and the volcano contracted horizontally similar to 6 m. The total eruptive volume is estimated as being similar to 150x10(6) m(3). The opening-phase tephra is more evolved than the eruptive products that followed. The compositional variation of tephra and lava sampled over the course of the eruption is attributed to eruption from a zoned sill that lies 2.1 km beneath the caldera floor.

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