Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

First detection of precursory ground inflation of a small phreatic eruption by InSAR

2018; Elsevier BV; Volume: 491; Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.epsl.2018.03.041

ISSN

1385-013X

Autores

Tomokazu Kobayashi, Yu Morishita, Hiroshi Munekane,

Tópico(s)

Cryospheric studies and observations

Resumo

Phreatic eruptions are caused by pressurization of geothermal fluid sources at shallow levels. They are relatively small compared to typical magmatic eruptions, but can be very hazardous. However, owing to their small magnitudes, their occurrences are difficult to predict. Here we show the detection of locally distributed ground inflation preceding a small phreatic eruption at the Hakone volcano, Japan, through the application of interferometric synthetic aperture radar analysis. The ground inflation proceeded the eruption at slow speed of ∼5 mm/month with a spatial size of ∼200 m in the early stage, and then it accelerated 2 months before the eruption that occurred for the first time in 800–900 yrs. The ground uplift reached ∼30 cm, and the eruption occurred nearby the most deformed part. The deformation speed correlated well with inflation of spherical source located at 4.8 km below sea level, thus suggesting that heat and/or volcanic fluid supply from the spherical source, maybe magma reservoir, directly drove the subsurface hydrothermal activity. Our results demonstrate that high-spatial-resolution deformation data can be a good indicator of subsurface pressure conditions with pinpoint spatial accuracy during the preparatory process of phreatic eruptions.

Referência(s)