4.7 Article

Explosion depths for phreatomagmatic eruptions

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 41, Issue 9, Pages 3045-3051

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2014GL060096

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Funding

  1. 3E Fund at University at Buffalo

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Subsurface phreatomagmatic explosions can result from the interaction of ascending magma with groundwater. Experiments over a wide range of energies show that for a given energy there is a depth below which an explosion will be contained within the subsurface (not erupt), and there is a corresponding shallower depth that will optimize ejecta dispersal. We combine these relationships with constraints on the energies of phreatomagmatic explosions at maar-diatreme volcanoes and show that most eruptions are likely sourced by explosions in the uppermost similar to 200 m, and even shallower ones (< 100 m) are likely to dominate deposition onto tephra rings. Most explosions below similar to 200m will not erupt but contribute to formation of, and to the vertical mixing of materials within, a diatreme (vent structure), with only rare very high energy explosions between similar to 200 and 500 m erupting. Similar constraints likely apply at other volcanoes that experience phreatomagmatic explosions.

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