Scientists study crystals to improve understanding of volcanic eruption triggers
Washington, August 29 : A team of scientists from the Durham University and the
University of Leeds, UK, have studied crystal formation from a volcano, in Santorini, in
Greece, to calculate the timescale between the trigger of volcanic activity and the
volcano's eruption.
According to the scientists, the technique can be applied to other volcanoes - such as
Vesuvius, near Naples, in Italy - and will help inform the decisions of civil defence
agencies.
Worldwide, it is estimated that between 50 and 70 volcanoes erupt each year, but due to
the long gaps between eruptions at most volcanoes it is hard to understand how any
individual volcano behaves.
This work allows scientists to better understand this behaviour.
During the research, the scientists looked at crystals from the 1925-28 eruption of Nea
Kameni, in Santorini.
Lead author Dr Victoria Martin, of Durham University, showed that the crystal rims
reacted with molten rock, or magma, as it moved into the volcano's shallow chamber prior
to eruption.
This process is thought to be associated with shallow level earthquake activity, as
shown by modern volcano monitoring.
By studying the area between the crystal core and the rim, the team then worked out how
long the rims had existed - revealing how long the magma was in the shallow chamber before
it erupted.
The crystals showed the 1925-28 eruption at Nea Kameni took place three to ten weeks
after the magma entered the shallow system.
As magma movement typically causes seismic activity, if any future seismic or inflation
activity at Nea Kameni can be linked to magma recharge of the volcano, the scientists
predict an eruption could follow within a similar timescale.
The team hopes this method can be applied to other volcanoes, allowing the pre-eruption
behaviour to be better understood - and understanding of volcanoes to be extended back
further in time.
According to co-author Dr Dan Morgan, from the School of Earth and Environment, at the
University of Leeds, "We hope to develop these techniques further and apply them to more
volcanoes worldwide."
"Potentially, these techniques could extend our knowledge of volcanic recharge
considerably, as they can be applied to material erupted before volcanic monitoring was
commonplace," he added.
"We hope that what we find in the crystals in terms of timescales can be linked with
phenomena such as earthquakes," said Professor Jon Davidson, Chair of Earth Sciences at
Durham University.
"If we can relate the timescales we measure to such events, we may be able to say when
we could expect a volcano to erupt," he added.
--ANI