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A global perspective on volcanoes and eruptions

A global perspective on volcanoes and eruptions. Richard Wunderman , Lee Siebert, James Luhr, Tom Simkin, and Ed Venzke. Smithsonian Institution National Museum of Natural History Global Volcanism Program Washington, D.C. Overview of talk The Smithsonian’s involvement

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A global perspective on volcanoes and eruptions

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  1. A global perspective on volcanoes and eruptions Richard Wunderman, Lee Siebert, James Luhr, Tom Simkin, and Ed Venzke Smithsonian Institution National Museum of Natural History Global Volcanism Program Washington, D.C.

  2. Overview of talk • The Smithsonian’s involvement • Terminology, geography, and where explosive volcanoes reside • Patterns and trends • Conclusions

  3. Years Publication Names 1968-75 Center for Short-Lived Phenomena 1975-89 Scientific Event Alert Network Bulletin (SEAN Bulletin) 1990- Bulletin of the Global Volcanism Network (GVN Bulletin) 1996- Website of Global Volcanism Program 2000- Weekly Reports (with USGS)

  4. Global Volcanism Program • Databases covering the past 10,000 years (the ‘Holocene’) including ~1500 volcanoes, their ~8900 eruptions, and over 21,000 images. • On-going eruptive activity discussed in both the Bulletin of the Global Volcanism Network (monthly) and Weekly Reports. • Website.

  5. Aerial shot of Grímsvötn eruption plume,18 December 1998. Courtesy of NVI; photo by Karl Grönvold (GVN Bull 23:11). Ash plume reached ~10 km altitude.

  6. Subduction

  7. Over-riding plate (SiO2 enriched) Subducted seawater (blue) rises into the overlying mantle where it triggers partial melting. Pods of melt ascend (yellow). Ocean Shallow seas (or continental margin) Sea floor basalt and mud Upper mantle Subducting slab

  8. Subduction-related volcanism • Chains of volcanoes producing volatile-rich (wet) magmas that can erupt violently (lava domes, caldera eruptions, many landscape-altering eruptions with tall ash plumes) • In USGS aircraft-ash encounter database these volcanoes were the source for vast majority of incidents

  9. Terminology • A general term for fragmental material ejected during an eruption is tephra; the fine-grained partition is ash (diameter 2 mm) • Study of tephra layers enabled dating of many pre-historic Holocene eruptions, now tabulated in our data base • Eruption–solid volcanic products or molten magma must arrive at the surface USGS photo

  10. Some eruptions are hard to miss . . . • Still evaluating ways to estimate their size and impact. • It can take years to evaluate an eruption using conventional methods. • More than half the world’s known active volcanoes found in developing nations. USGS photo

  11. How many volcanoes active? Deep marine volcanism nearly absent from our database Our definition of ‘volcano’ tends to lump vents with spatial and geochemical affinity together into groups or fields, which are counted as a single volcano ‘Active’ means erupted in the past 10,000 years (‘the Holocene’), but large volcanoes are capable of erupting after longer repose intervals

  12. How many volcanoes active?

  13. VEI: An attempt to quantify qualitative data Newhall and Self (1982)

  14. Large eruptions:How many?

  15. Interval from start to climax (paroxysm): •  1 hour (~20%)  1 day (~40%) • 1 week (~50%) . . . but can extend to over 20 years

  16. Eruption duration

  17. How many ash clouds to cruising altitudes (10 km, 33000 ft)? • During the decade 1975-85, GVN Bulletin reports and Simkin (1991, USGS Bull 2047) noted ~60 clouds • Probably missed some eruptions • Altitudes of plume top—poorly constrained • Often very hard to say how an eruption will progress • Not a good idea to fly over a tall plume

  18. GVP websitewww.volcano.si.edu

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