TY - JOUR
T1 - Growth process of the lava dome/flow complex at Sinabung Volcano during 2013–2016
AU - Nakada, Setsuya
AU - Zaennudin, Akhmad
AU - Yoshimoto, Mitsuhiro
AU - Maeno, Fukashi
AU - Suzuki, Yuki
AU - Hokanishi, Natsumi
AU - Sasaki, Hisashi
AU - Iguchi, Masato
AU - Ohkura, Takahiro
AU - Gunawan, Hendra
AU - Triastuty, Hetty
N1 - Funding Information:
Field survey and volcanic ash sampling were largely helped by Armen Putra. This research was carried by a part of JST/JICA SATREPS ?Integrated study on mitigation of multimodal disasters caused by ejection of volcanic products?, and supported partly by JSPS KAKENHI Grant Numbers 25350493 and 16K01313. The DSM analysis in this study was supported by T. Chiba. Comments on early manuscript by Heather Wright and Fidel Costa were very helpful to complete this paper.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2019/9/15
Y1 - 2019/9/15
N2 - Mount Sinabung, North Sumatra, Indonesia, erupted for the first time in 2010 and reactivated again in 2013. The eruption started with a phreatic phase, changed to phreatomagmatic, and then andesite lava appeared at the summit crater in late December 2013. Lava effusion continued and has been associated with partial to complete collapses of the lava complex, which successively generated pyroclastic density currents (PDCs). The lava complex grew first as a lava dome and then developed into a lava flow (lava extension stage). It extended up to about 3 km in horizontal runout distance by late 2014. When the front of the lava complex moved onto the middle and lower slope of the volcano, PDC events were initially replaced by simple rock falls. Inflation of the upper part of the lava complex began in mid-2014 when the movement of the lava flow front stagnated. The inflation was associated with hybrid seismic events and frequent partial collapses of the upper part of the lava complex, generating PDC events with long travel distances. From mid-September 2014, new lobes repeatedly appeared near the summit and collapsed. Cyclic vulcanian events began in August 2015 when hybrid events peaked, and continued > 1.5 years (vulcanian stage). These events sometimes triggered PDCs, whose deposits contained vesiculated lava fragments. The distribution of PDC deposits, which extended over time, mostly overlapped in areal extent with that of the 9th–10th century eruption. Eruption volumes were estimated based on measurements with a laser distance meter during 6 periods, digital surface model (DSM) analysis of satellite images during one period, and the cumulative number of seismically detected PDC events, assuming a constant volume of each PDC event. The total volume of eruption products reached about 0.16 km3 DRE as of the end of 2015. The lava discharge rate was largest during the initial stage (> 7 m3/s) and decreased exponentially over time. The discharge rate during the vulcanian stage was ≪ 1 m3/s. The trend of decreasing discharge rate is in harmony with that of ground deflation recorded by a GPS measurement. The chemical composition of lava slightly evolved with time. Cyclic vulcanian events may have been triggered by limited degassing conditions in the upper conduit and by unloading of the conduit by lava dome collapses.
AB - Mount Sinabung, North Sumatra, Indonesia, erupted for the first time in 2010 and reactivated again in 2013. The eruption started with a phreatic phase, changed to phreatomagmatic, and then andesite lava appeared at the summit crater in late December 2013. Lava effusion continued and has been associated with partial to complete collapses of the lava complex, which successively generated pyroclastic density currents (PDCs). The lava complex grew first as a lava dome and then developed into a lava flow (lava extension stage). It extended up to about 3 km in horizontal runout distance by late 2014. When the front of the lava complex moved onto the middle and lower slope of the volcano, PDC events were initially replaced by simple rock falls. Inflation of the upper part of the lava complex began in mid-2014 when the movement of the lava flow front stagnated. The inflation was associated with hybrid seismic events and frequent partial collapses of the upper part of the lava complex, generating PDC events with long travel distances. From mid-September 2014, new lobes repeatedly appeared near the summit and collapsed. Cyclic vulcanian events began in August 2015 when hybrid events peaked, and continued > 1.5 years (vulcanian stage). These events sometimes triggered PDCs, whose deposits contained vesiculated lava fragments. The distribution of PDC deposits, which extended over time, mostly overlapped in areal extent with that of the 9th–10th century eruption. Eruption volumes were estimated based on measurements with a laser distance meter during 6 periods, digital surface model (DSM) analysis of satellite images during one period, and the cumulative number of seismically detected PDC events, assuming a constant volume of each PDC event. The total volume of eruption products reached about 0.16 km3 DRE as of the end of 2015. The lava discharge rate was largest during the initial stage (> 7 m3/s) and decreased exponentially over time. The discharge rate during the vulcanian stage was ≪ 1 m3/s. The trend of decreasing discharge rate is in harmony with that of ground deflation recorded by a GPS measurement. The chemical composition of lava slightly evolved with time. Cyclic vulcanian events may have been triggered by limited degassing conditions in the upper conduit and by unloading of the conduit by lava dome collapses.
KW - Andesite lava dome/flow
KW - Cyclic vulcanian events
KW - Discharge rate
KW - Pyroclastic density current
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2017.06.012
DO - 10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2017.06.012
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85021697101
SN - 0377-0273
VL - 382
SP - 120
EP - 136
JO - Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research
JF - Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research
ER -