Volcanic Lakes pp 73-91 | Cite as
Mechanisms of Crater Lake Breaching Eruptions
Abstract
In this chapter we review physical models on phreatomagmatic, phreatic, hydrothermal, and geyser-like eruptions and, for the first time, place them in a crater lake context. Examples of known crater lake systems for the different eruption types are provided. Besides the direct injection of a fresh magma into a crater lake, leading to phreatomagmatic activity, a crater lake is a strong condensing medium, sensitive to sudden pressure changes when injected by gas-vapor batches, which can lead to non-magmatic, though violent eruptions. The implosive nature, the role of the heat pipe and molten sulfur pool at the lake bottom are central in the phreatic eruption model. Contrary to phreatic eruptions, hydrothermal eruptions are instigated by a sudden pressure drop, causing boiling and vapor release, rather than by the input of a gas-vapor phase of magmatic origin. Geyser-like activity beneath or near crater lakes is analog to classic geysering, and becomes more obvious when lake water level is low. Although not explosive, the peculiar lake drainage and refill cycles of two lakes are discussed. The first outcomes of numerical simulation approaches help to better quantify injection pressure and vapor/liquid proportions of the input fluid. We stress that the various manifestations of eruptive activity at crater lakes is not necessarily linked to changes in magmatic activity, which could lead to misleading interpretations regarding volcano monitoring.
Keywords
Crater lake eruptions Phreatic eruptions Phreatomagmatic eruptions Hydrothermal eruptions Geyser-like activity Volcano monitoringNotes
Acknowledgments
DR wishes to thank his co-author MM for encouraging to write this review chapter. The chapter is “VUELCO inspired”, and hopefully reaches multiple needs. The authors wish to thank Nico Fournier and an anonymous reviewer for constructive and insightful comments which largely enhanced the chapter. Jean Vandemeulebrouck is acknowledged for efficient editorial handling.
References
- Agusto M, Tassi F, Caselli AT, Vaselli O, Rouwet D, Capaccioni B, Caliro S, Chiodini G, Darrah T (2013) Gas geochemistry of the magmatic-hydrothermal fluid reservoir in the Copahue-Caviahue Volcanic Complex (Argentina) J Volcanol Geotherm Res 257:44–56. doi: 10.1016/j.volgeores.2013.3.03.003
- Alvarado GE (2010) Hydrogeological and sedimentological aspects of the mud flows related to the Cinchona earthquake (Mw 6.2) of January 8, 2009, Costa Rica. Rev Geol Am Centr 43:67–96Google Scholar
- Baker ET, Massoth GJ, de Ronde CEJ, Lupton JE, McInnes BIA (2002) Observations and sampling of an ongoing subsurface eruption of Kavachi volcano, Solomon Islands, May 2000. Geology 30:975–978CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Bani P, Oppenheimer C, Varekamp JC, Quinou T, Lardy M, Carn S (2009) Remarkable geochemical changes and degassing at Voui crater lake, Ambae volcano, Vanuatu. J Volcanol Geotherm Res 188:347–357. doi: 10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2009.09.018 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Barberi F, Bertagnini A, Landi P, Principe C (1992) A review on phreatic eruptions and their precursors. J Volcanol Geotherm Res 52:231–246CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Belousov A, Belousova M (2001) Eruptive process, effects and deposits of the 1996 and the ancient basaltic phreatomagmatic eruptions in Karymskoye lake, Kamchatka, Russia. In: White JDL, Riggs NR (eds) Volcaniclastic sedimentation in lacustrine settings. Blackwell Sciences, Oxford, pp 35–60CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Bercich BJ, McKibbin R (1992) Modelling the development of natural hydrothermal eruptions. In: Proceedings 14th NZ geothermal workshop 1992, pp 305–312, and corrigendum, Proceedings of the 15th NZ geothermal workshop 1993, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand, pp 345–346Google Scholar
- Brantley SL, Borgia A, Rowe G, Fernández JF, Reynolds JR (1987) Poás volcano crater lake acts as a condenser for acid metal-rich brine. Nature 330:470–472CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Brodsky EE, Roeloffs E, Woodcock D, Gall I, Manga M (2003) A mechanism for sustained ground water pressure changes induced by distant earthquakes. J Geophys Res 108. doi: 10.1029/2002JB002321
- Brodsky EE, Sturtevant B, Kanamori H (1998) Volcanoes, earthquakes and rectified diffusion. J Geophys Res 103:23827–23838Google Scholar
- Brown G, Rymer H, Dowden J, Kapadia P, Stevenson D, Barquero J, Morales LD (1989) Energy budget analysis for Poás Crater lake: implications for predicting volcanic activity. Nature 339:370–373CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Browne PRL, Lawless JV (2001) Characteristics of hydrothermal eruptions, with examples from New Zealand and elsewhere. Earth Sci Rev 52:299–331CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Burnham CW (1979) Magmas and hydrothermal fluids. In: Barnes HL (ed) Geochemistry of hydrothermal ore deposits. Wiley, New York, pp 71–136Google Scholar
- Christenson BW (2000) Geochemistry of fluids associated with the 1995–1996 eruption of Mt. Ruapehu, New Zealand: signatures and processes in the magmatic-hydrothermal system. J Volcanol Geotherm Res 97:1–30CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Christenson BW, Németh K, Rouwet D, Tassi F, Vandemeulebrouck J, Varekamp JC (2015) Introduction chapter volcanic lakes. In: Rouwet D, Tassi F, Vandemeulebrouck J, Christenson B (eds) Volcanic Lakes. Springer, Berlin. doi: 10.1007/978-3-642-36833-2_1
- Christenson BW, Reyes AG, Young R, Moebis A, Sherburn S, Cole-Baker J, Britten K (2010) Cyclic processes and factors leading to phreatic eruption events: insights from the 25 September 2007 eruption through Ruapehu Crater Lake, New Zealand. J Volcanol Geotherm Res 191:15–32CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Christenson BW, Wood CP (1993) Evolution of the vent-hosted hydrothermal system beneath Ruapehu Crater Lake, New Zealand. Bull Volcanol 55:547–565CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Christenson BW, Werner CA, Reyes AG, Sherburn S, Scott BJ, Miller C, Rosenburg MJ, Hurst AW, Britten KA (2007) Hazards from hydrothermally sealed volcanic conduits. EOS 88(50):53–55CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- de Ronde CEJ, Chadwick WW Jr, Ditchburn RG, Embley RW, Tunnicliffe V, Baker ET, Walker SL, Ferrini VL, Merle SM (2015) Molten sulphur lakes of intraoceanic arc volcanoes. In: Rouwet D, Tassi F, Vandemeulebrouck J, Christenson B (eds) Volcanic Lakes. Springer, Berlin. doi: 10.1007/978-3-642-36833-2_11
- Delmelle P, Bernard A (1994) Geochemistry, mineralogy, and chemical modeling of the acid crater lake of Kawah Ijen volcano, Indonesia. Geochim Cosmochim Acta 58:2445–2460CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Delmelle P, Bernard A (2015) The remarkable chemistry of sulfur in volcanic acid crater lakes: a scientific tribute to Bokuichiro Takano and Minoru Kusakabe. In: Rouwet D, Tassi F, Vandemeulebrouck J, Christenson B (eds) Volcanic Lakes. Springer, Berlin. doi: 10.1007/978-3-642-36833-2_10
- Dowden J, Kapadia P, Brown G, Rymer H (1991) Dynamics of a geyser eruption. J Geophys Res 96:18059–18071CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Fournier N, Witham F, Moureau-Fournier M, Bardou L (2009) Boiling Lake of Dominica, West Indies: high-temperature volcanic crater lake dynamics. J Geophys Res 114:B02203. doi: 10.1029/2008JB005773 Google Scholar
- Fournier RO (1969) Old faithful: a physical model. Science 163:304–305CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Gittings ML, Weaver RP, Clover M, Betlach T, Byrne N, Coker R, Dendy E, Hueckstaedt R, New K, Oakes WR, Ranta D, Stefan R (2008) The RAGE radiation hydrodynamic code. Comput Sci Disc 1(015005):63Google Scholar
- Hedenquist JW, Henley RW (1985) Hydrothermal eruptions in the Waiotapu geothermal system. Econ Geol 80:1640–1688CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Hedenquist JW, Lowenstern JB (1994) The role of magmas in the formation of hydrothermal ore deposits. Nature 370:519–527CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Henley RW (2015) Hyperacidic volcanic lakes, metal sinks and magmatic gas expansion in arc volcanoes. In: Rouwet D, Tassi F, Vandemeulebrouck J, Christenson B (eds) Volcanic Lakes. Springer, Berlin. doi: 10.1007/978-3-642-36833-2_6
- Hurst AW, Bibby HM, Scott BJ, McGuinness MJ (1991) The heat source of Ruapehu Crater Lake; deductions from the energy and mass balances. J Volcanol Geotherm Res 6:1–21CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Hurst T, Christenson B, Cole-Baker J (2012) Use of a weather buoy to derive improved heat and mass balance parameters for Ruapehu Crater Lake. J Volcanol Geotherm Res 235–236:23–28CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Ingebritsen SE, Rojstaczer SA (1993) Controls on geyser periodicity. Science 262:889–892CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Ingebritsen SE, Rojstaczer SA (1996) Geyser periodicity and the response of geysers to deformation. J Geophys Res 101:21891–21905CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Jolly AD, Sherburn S, Jousset P, Kilgour G (2010) Eruption source processes derived from seismic and acoustic observations of the 25 September 2007 Ruapehu eruption-North Island, New Zealand. J Volcanol Geotherm Res 191:33–45. doi: 10.1016/j.volgeores.2010.01.009
- Jones JG (1970) Intraglacial volcanoes of the Laugarvatn region, southwest Iceland, II. J Geol 78:127–140CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Kling GW, Evans WC, Tanyileke GZ (2015) The comparative limnology of Lake Nyos and Monoun, Cameroon. In: Rouwet D, Tassi F, Vandemeulebrouck J, Christenson B (eds) Volcanic Lakes. Springer, Berlin. doi: 10.1007/978-3-642-36833-2_18
- Kieffer SW (1984) Seismicity at old faithful geyser: an isolated source of geothermal noise and possible analogue of volcanic seismicity. J Volcanol Geotherm Res 22:59–95CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Kilgour G, Manville V, Della Pasqua F, Graettinger A, Hodgson KA, Jolly GE (2010) The 25 September 2007 eruption of Mount Ruapehu, New Zealand: directed ballistics, surtseyan jets, and ice-slurry lahars. J Volcanol Geotherm Res 191:1–14CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Kiryukin AV, Rychkova TV, Dubrovskaya IK (2012) Formation of the hydrothermal system in Geysers Valley (Kronotsky Nature Reserve, Kamchatka) and triggers of the Giant Landslide. Appl Geochem 27:1753–1766CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Kokelaar BP (1983) The mechanism of Surtseyan volcanism. J Geol Soc London 140:939–994CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Kokelaar BP (1986) Magma-water interactions in subaqueous and emergent basaltic volcanism. Bull Volcanol 48:275–289CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Kokelaar BP, Durant GP (1983) The submarine eruption of Surtla (Surtsey, Iceland). J Volcanol Geotherm Res 19:239–246CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Kusakabe M (2015) Evolution of CO2 content in Lakes Nyos and Monoun, and sub-lacustrine CO2-recharge system at Lake Nyos as envisaged from C/3He ratios in noble gas signatures. In: Rouwet D, Tassi F, Vandemeulebrouck J, Christenson B (eds) Volcanic Lakes. Springer, Berlin. doi: 10.1007/978-3-642-36833-2_19
- Legaz A, Revil A, Roux P, Vandemeulebrouck J, Gouédard P, Hurst T, Bolève (2009) Self-potential and passive seismic monitoring of hydrothermal activity: a case study at Iodine Pool, Waimangu geothermal valley, New Zealand. J Volcanol Geotherm Res 179:11–18CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Manga M, Brodsky E (2006) Seismic triggering of eruptions in the far field: volcanoes and geysers. Annu Rev Earth Planet Sci 34:263–291CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Manville V (2015) Volcano-hydrologic hazards from volcanic lakes. In: Rouwet D, Tassi F, Vandemeulebrouck J, Christenson B (eds) Volcanic Lakes. Springer, Berlin. doi: 10.1007/978-3-642-36833-2_2
- Marini L, Principe C, Chiodini G, Cioni R, Fytikas M, Marinelli G (1993) Hydrothermal eruptions of Nysiros (Dodecanese, Greece). Past events and present hazard. J Volcanol Geotherm Res 56:71–94CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Mastin LG (1991) The roles of magma and groundwater in the phreatic eruptions at Inyo Craters, Long Valley Caldera, California. Bull Volcanol 53:579–596CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Mastin LG (1994) Explosive tephra emissions at Mount St. Helens, 1989–1991: the violent escape of magmatic gas following storms? Geol Soc Am Bull 106:175–185CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Mastin LG (1995) Thermodynamics of gas and steam-blast eruptions. Bull Volcanol 57:85–98CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Mastin LG, Witter JB (2000) The hazards of eruptions through lakes and seawater. J Volcanol Geotherm Res 97:195–214CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Mazot A, Bernard A (2015) CO2 degassing from volcanic lakes. In: Rouwet D, Tassi F, Vandemeulebrouck J, Christenson B (eds) Volcanic Lakes. Springer, Berlin. doi: 10.1007/978-3-642-36833-2_15
- Mazot A, Rouwet D, Taran Y, Inguaggiato S, Varley N (2011) CO2 and He degassing at El Chichón volcano, Chiapas, Mexico: gas flux, origin and relationship with local and regional tectonics. Bull Volcanol 73:423–441CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Morgan LA, Shanks PWC, Pierce KL (2009) Hydrothermal processes above a large magma chamber: large hydrothermal systems and hydrothermal explosions in Yellowstone National Park. Geol Soc Am Spec Pap 459:95Google Scholar
- Morrissey M, Gisler G, Weaver R, Gittings M (2010) Numerical model of crater lake eruptions. Bull Volcanol. doi: 10.1007/s00445-010-0392-5
- Moyer TC, Swanson DA (1987) Secondary hydroeruptions in pyroclastic-flow deposits: examples from Mount St. Helens J Volcanol Geotherm Res 32:299–319CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Muffler LJP, White DE, Truesdell AH (1971) Hydrothermal explosion craters in yellowstone National Park. Geol Soc Am Bull 82:723–740CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Nairn IA, Wiradiradja S (1980) Late quaternary hydrothermal explosion breccias at Kawerau Geothermal Field, New Zealand. Bull Volcanol 43:1–13CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Németh K, Cronin SJ, Charley D, Harrison M, Garae E (2006) Exploding lakes in Vanuatu—Surtseyan-style eruptions witnessed on Ambae Island. Episodes 29:87–92Google Scholar
- Newhall CG, Self S (1982) The volcanic explosivity index (VEI): an estimate of explosive magnitude for historical volcanism. J Geophys Res 87(C2):1231–1238CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Ohba T, Hirabayashi J, Nogami K (2008) Temporal changes in the chemistry of lake water within Yugama Crater, Kusatsu-Shirane Volcano, Japan: implications for the evolution of the magmatic-hydrothermal system. J Volcanol Geotherm Res 178:131–144CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Oppenheimer C (1992) Sulphur eruptions at Volcán Poás, Costa Rica. J Volcanol Geotherm Res 49:1–21CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Oppenheimer C, Stevenson D (1989) Liquid sulphur lakes at Poás volcano. Nature 32:790–793CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Pasternack GB, Varekamp JC (1994) The geochemistry of the Keli Mutu crater lake, flores, Indonesia. Geochem J 28:243–262CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Pasternack GB, Varekamp JC (1997) Volcanic lake systematcis 1. Physical constraints. Bull Volcanol 58:528–538CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Peiffer L, Taran Y, Lounejeva E, Solis-Pichardo G, Rouwet D, Bernard-Romero R (2011) Tracing thermal aquifers of El Chichón volcano-hydrothermal system (México) with 87Sr/86Sr, Ca/Sr and REE. J Volcanol Geotherm Res 205:55–66CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Rouwet D, Taran Y, Inguaggiato S, Varley N, Santiago SJA (2008) Hydrochemical dynamics of the “lake-spring” system in the crater of El Chichón volcano (Chiapas, Mexico). J Volcanol Geotherm Res 178:237–248CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Rouwet D, Taran Y, Varley NR (2004) Dynamics and mass balance of El Chichón crater lake, Mexico. Geofís Int 43:427–434Google Scholar
- Rouwet D, Tassi F, Mora-Amador RA, Sandri L, Chiarini V (2014) Past, present and future of volcanic lake monitoring. J Volcanol Geotherm Res 272:78–97. doi: 10.1016/j.volgeores.2013.12.009
- Rowe GL, Brantley SL, Fernández M, Fernández JF, Borgia A, Barquero J (1992) Fluid-volcano interaction in an active stratovolcano: the Crater Lake system of Poás Volcano, Costa Rica. J Volcanol Geotherm Res 64:233–267CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Shanks PWC, Morgan LA, Balistrieri LA, Alt JC (2005) Hydrothermal vents, siliceous hydrothermal deposits, and hydrothermally altered sediments in Yellowstone Lake. In: Inskeep WP, McDermott TR (eds) Geothermal biology and geochemistry in yellowstone national park, pp 53–72Google Scholar
- Stearns HA, McDonald GA (1949) Geology and ground-water resources of the island of Hawaii. Hawaii Div Hydrogr Bull 9:1–363Google Scholar
- Steinberg GS, Merzhanov AG, Steinberg AS (1981) Geyser process: its theory, modeling and field experiment, 1, theory of the geyser process. Mod Geol 8:67–70Google Scholar
- Steinberg GS, Merzhanov AG, Steinberg AS (1982a) Geyser process: its theory, modeling and field experiment, 3, on metastability of water in geysers. Mod Geol 8:75–78Google Scholar
- Steinberg GS, Merzhanov AG, Steinberg AS (1982b) Geyser process: its theory, modeling and field experiment, 4, on seismic influence on geyser regime. Mod Geol 8:79–86Google Scholar
- Steinberg GS, Merzhanov AG, Steinberg AS, Rasina AA (1982c) Geyser process: its theory, modeling and field experiment, 2, a laboratory model of a geyser. Mod Geol 8:71–74Google Scholar
- Takano B, Kuno A, Ohsawa S, Kawakami H (2008) Aqueous sulfur speciation possibly linked to sublimnic volcanic-gas water interaction during a quiescent period at Yugama crater lake, Kusatsu-Shirane volcano, Central Japan. J Volcanol Geotherm Res 178:145–168. doi: 10.1016/j.volgeores.2008.06.038
- Takano B, Saitoh H, Takano E (1994) Geochemical implications of subaqueous molten sulfur at Yugama crater lake, Kusatsu-Shirane volcano, Japan. Geochem J 28:199–216CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Taran Y, Fischer TP, Pokrovsky B, Sano Y, Armienta MA, Macías JL (1998) Geochemistry of the volcano–hydrothermal system of El Chichón Volcano, Chiapas, Mexico. Bull Volcanol 59:436–449CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Tassi F, Rouwet D (2014) An overview of the structure, hazards, and methods of investigation of Nyos-type lakes from the geochemical perspective. J Limnol 73(1). doi: 10.4081/jlimnol.2014.836
- Thorarinsson S (1967) Surtsey: the new Island in the North Atlantic. Viking Press, NY, p 47Google Scholar
- Toraishi S, Tominaga H (1940) Sulfur spherules in crater lake, Okama, Zao Volcano. Kagaku (Science) 10:3–4 (in Japanese)Google Scholar
- Truesdell AH, Nathenson M, Rye RO (1977) The effects of subsurface boiling and dilution on the isotopic compositions of yellowstone thermal waters. J Geophys Res 82:3694–3704CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Vandemeulebrouck J, Hurst T, Scott BJ (2008) The effects of hydrothermal eruptions and a tectonic earthquake on a cycling crater lake (Inferno Crater Lake, Waimangu, New Zealand). J Volcanol Geotherm Res 178:271–275CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Vandemeulebrouck J, Stemmelen D, Hurst T, Grangeon J (2005) Analogue modeling of instabilities in crater lake hydrothermal systems. J Geophys Res 110:B02212. doi: 10.1029/2003JB002794 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Varekamp JC (2015) The chemical composition and evolution of volcanic lakes. In: Rouwet D, Tassi F, Vandemeulebrouck J, Christenson B (eds) Volcanic Lakes. Springer, Berlin. doi: 10.1007/978-3-642-36833-2_4
- Varekamp JC, Ouimette AP, Herman SW, Bermúdez A, Delpino D (2001) Hydrothermal element fluxes from Copahue, Argentina: a “beehive” volcano in turmoil. Geology 29:1059–1062CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Varekamp JC, Pasternack GB, Rowe GL Jr (2000) Volcanic lake systematics II. Chemical constraints. J Volcanol Geotherm Res 97:161–179CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- Vaselli O, Tedesco D, Cuoco E, Tassi F (2015) The CO2-CH4-rich gas reservoir of Lake Kivu (democratic republic of the Congo and Rwanda): a review of physical-chemical and isotopic data and triggers of limnic eruptions. In: Rouwet D, Tassi F, Vandemeulebrouck J, Christenson B (eds) Volcanic Lakes. Springer, Berlin. doi: 10.1007/978-3-642-36833-2_22
- Werner C, Christenson BW, Hagerty M, Britten K (2006) Variability of volcanic gas emissions during a crater lake heating cycle at Ruapehu Volcano, New Zealand. J Volcanol Geotherm Res 154:291–302CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- White DE (1967) Some principles of geyser activity, mainly from steamboat springs, Nevada. Am J Sci 265:641–684CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- White DE, Muffler LJP, Truesdell AH (1971) Vapor-dominated hydrothermal systems compared with hot-water systems. Econ Geol 66:75–97CrossRefGoogle Scholar
- White JDL, Smellie JL, Clague DA (2003) Introduction: a deductive outline and topical overview of subaqueous explosive volcanism. Explosive subaqueous volcanism. Geophys Mono 140:1–23Google Scholar