Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Albino F., Pinel Virginie, Sigmundsson F. (2010). Influence of surface load variations on eruption likelihood : application to two Icelandic subglacial volcanoes, Grimsvotn and Katla. Geophysical Journal International, 181 (3), p. 1510-1524. ISSN 0956-540X.

Titre du document
Influence of surface load variations on eruption likelihood : application to two Icelandic subglacial volcanoes, Grimsvotn and Katla
Année de publication
2010
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000277716400022
Auteurs
Albino F., Pinel Virginie, Sigmundsson F.
Source
Geophysical Journal International, 2010, 181 (3), p. 1510-1524 ISSN 0956-540X
We investigate how surface load variations around volcanoes act on shallow magma chambers. Numerical calculations are carried out in axisymmetric geometry for an elliptical chamber embedded in an elastic medium. Magma compressibility is taken into account. For variable chamber shape, size and depth, we quantify how unloading events induce magmatic pressure change as well as variation of the threshold pressure required for dyke initiation at the chamber wall. We evaluate the triggering effect of these surface events on onset of eruptions and find it depends strongly on the surface load location and the magma chamber shape. We apply this model to two active Icelandic subglacial volcanoes: Grimsvotn and Katla. The 2004 eruption of Grimsvotn was immediately preceded by a jokulhlaup, a glacial outburst flood of 0.5 km3. We show that this event may have triggered the eruption only if the system was very close to failure conditions. Katla volcano is covered by the Myrdalsjokull ice cap. An annual cycle, with up to 6 m change in snow thickness, occurs from winter to summer. As the seasonal snow load is reduced, a pressure decrease of the same order of magnitude as the load is induced within the magma storage zone. Our model predicts that, in the case of a spherical or horizontally elongated magma chamber, eruptions are more likely when the snow cover is smallest, which appears consistent with the fact that all the last nine major historical eruptions at Katla occurred during the summer period. The model predicts an increase in Coulomb stress around the caldera, up to 7 km from its centre, during unloading periods, enough to trigger earthquakes. Stress due to snow load variations, with focusing of it in weak zones near the caldera boundary, is considered a contributing factor to seasonal seismicity observed beneath Myrdalsjokull.
Plan de classement
Géophysique interne [066]
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010049522]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010049522
Contact