Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Bridging the gap from caldera unrest to resurgence
View through CrossRef
<p>Calderas often inflate up to a few metres for weeks to years, which is evidence of short-term unrest. Some calderas also show larger uplift (up to a thousand metres), achieved over the long-term (hundreds to thousands of years), manifest by a resurgent dome or block. How the short-term inflation relates to long-term resurgence is still poorly understood, even though established views consider the two processes distinct. This study exploits the longer deformation time series now available for several calderas, as well as the better understanding of magmatic processes and their evolution, to try to bridge the gap between these two scales of uplift. Available data challenge established views, suggesting that resurgence, rather than being produced by constant or continuous uplift, is the net cumulated result of tens to thousands distinct episodes of inflation, even interrupted by deflation episodes, as observed on short-term unrest. These inflation episodes are ascribed to distinct pulses of shallow magma emplacement, with most of the magma remaining intruded, especially in felsic calderas. This supports an incremental growth of magmatic systems, consistently with that observed below resurgent calderas and what is inferred for plutons. Comparing the uplift (as expression of the intrusive record) and eruptive histories or resurgent calderas opens new exciting research paths to understand the causal relationships between intruded and erupted magma at a given caldera, thus enhancing its long-term eruptive forecast.</p>
Title: Bridging the gap from caldera unrest to resurgence
Description:
<p>Calderas often inflate up to a few metres for weeks to years, which is evidence of short-term unrest.
Some calderas also show larger uplift (up to a thousand metres), achieved over the long-term (hundreds to thousands of years), manifest by a resurgent dome or block.
How the short-term inflation relates to long-term resurgence is still poorly understood, even though established views consider the two processes distinct.
This study exploits the longer deformation time series now available for several calderas, as well as the better understanding of magmatic processes and their evolution, to try to bridge the gap between these two scales of uplift.
Available data challenge established views, suggesting that resurgence, rather than being produced by constant or continuous uplift, is the net cumulated result of tens to thousands distinct episodes of inflation, even interrupted by deflation episodes, as observed on short-term unrest.
These inflation episodes are ascribed to distinct pulses of shallow magma emplacement, with most of the magma remaining intruded, especially in felsic calderas.
This supports an incremental growth of magmatic systems, consistently with that observed below resurgent calderas and what is inferred for plutons.
Comparing the uplift (as expression of the intrusive record) and eruptive histories or resurgent calderas opens new exciting research paths to understand the causal relationships between intruded and erupted magma at a given caldera, thus enhancing its long-term eruptive forecast.
</p>.
Related Results
Tracking caldera cycles in the Aso-4 magmatic system
Tracking caldera cycles in the Aso-4 magmatic system
<p>Caldera-forming eruptions are among the most hazardous natural events on Earth and pose a significant risk for global consequences in the future. Recent petrologic...
Deformation around the Creede Caldera: A consequence of isostatic adjustment following Caldera Formation
Deformation around the Creede Caldera: A consequence of isostatic adjustment following Caldera Formation
The pattern of deformation around the Creede caldera (26.5 Ma), southwest Colorado, may provide clues to the physical mechanisms of caldera evolution, particularly resurgent doming...
Caldera collapse thresholds correlate with magma chamber dimensions
Caldera collapse thresholds correlate with magma chamber dimensions
AbstractExplosive caldera-forming eruptions eject voluminous magma during the gravitational collapse of the roof of the magma chamber. Caldera collapse is known to occur by rapid d...
Downsag calderas, ring faults, caldera sizes, and incremental caldera growth
Downsag calderas, ring faults, caldera sizes, and incremental caldera growth
Not all calderas conform to the currently favored model, in which a cylindrical block subsides as in cauldrons of deeply eroded volcanoes. Some calderas are downsagged structures, ...
Generation of Pre-Caldera Qixiangzhan and Syn-Caldera Millennium Rhyolites from Changbaishan Volcano by Shallow Remelting: Evidence from Zircon Hf–O Isotopes
Generation of Pre-Caldera Qixiangzhan and Syn-Caldera Millennium Rhyolites from Changbaishan Volcano by Shallow Remelting: Evidence from Zircon Hf–O Isotopes
The Changbaishan volcano is well known for its major caldera-forming Millennium Eruption (ME) in 946 CE (Common Era). We report Hf–O isotopes of zircon grains from pre-caldera Qixi...
Geophysical responses to an environmentally-boosted volcanic unrest
Geophysical responses to an environmentally-boosted volcanic unrest
Campi Flegrei caldera, one of the most dangerous volcanoes in the world, is experiencing the strongest seismic and deformation unrest of the last 40 years. Geophysical, environment...
Phase transitions of civil unrest across countries and time
Phase transitions of civil unrest across countries and time
AbstractPhase transitions, characterized by abrupt shifts between macroscopic patterns of organization, are ubiquitous in complex systems. Despite considerable research in the phys...
Sill to dyke transition beneath a caldera: the competition between local stress and regional extension. Insights from analogue experiments applied to Campi Flegrei caldera, Italy.
Sill to dyke transition beneath a caldera: the competition between local stress and regional extension. Insights from analogue experiments applied to Campi Flegrei caldera, Italy.
Unrests at calderas are usually characterized by surface uplift, which is often driven by the pressurization of a sill-like reservoir. If an unrest ends up with an eruption, the lo...

