Fallout and distribution of volcanic ash over Argentina following the May 2008 explosive eruption of Chaitén, Chile

The major explosive eruption of Chaitén volcano, Chile, in May 2008 provided a rare opportunity to track the long-range dispersal and deposition of fine volcanic ash. The eruption followed ~ 10,000 years of quiescence, was the largest explosive eruption globally since Hudson, Chile, in 1991, and was...

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Main Authors: Watt, S, Pyle, D, Mather, T, Martin, R, Matthews, N
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: American Geophysical Union 2009
Subjects:
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author Watt, S
Pyle, D
Mather, T
Martin, R
Matthews, N
author_facet Watt, S
Pyle, D
Mather, T
Martin, R
Matthews, N
author_sort Watt, S
collection OXFORD
description The major explosive eruption of Chaitén volcano, Chile, in May 2008 provided a rare opportunity to track the long-range dispersal and deposition of fine volcanic ash. The eruption followed ~ 10,000 years of quiescence, was the largest explosive eruption globally since Hudson, Chile, in 1991, and was the first explosive rhyolitic eruption since Novarupta, Alaska, in 1912. Field examinsation of distal ashfall indicates that ~ 1.6 x 10¹¹ kg of ash (dense rock equivalent volume of ~ 0.07 km³) was deposited over ~ 2 x 10⁵ km² of Argentina during the first week of eruption. The minimum eruption magnitude, estimated from the mass of the tephra deposit, is 4.2. Several discrete ashfall units are identifiable from their distribution and grain size characteristics, with more energetic phases showing a bimodal size distribution and evidence of cloud aggregation processes. Ash chemistry was uniform throughout the early stages of eruption and is consistent with magma storage prior to eruption at depths of 3-6 km. Deposition of ash over a continental region allowed the tracking of eruption development and demonstrates the potential complexity of tephra dispersal from a single eruption, which in this case comprised several phases over a week-long period of intense activity.
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spelling oxford-uuid:24259b5a-47d2-4b4a-96b3-115d7a5049cd2022-03-26T11:48:22ZFallout and distribution of volcanic ash over Argentina following the May 2008 explosive eruption of Chaitén, ChileJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:24259b5a-47d2-4b4a-96b3-115d7a5049cdEarth sciencesEnglishOxford University Research Archive - ValetAmerican Geophysical Union2009Watt, SPyle, DMather, TMartin, RMatthews, NThe major explosive eruption of Chaitén volcano, Chile, in May 2008 provided a rare opportunity to track the long-range dispersal and deposition of fine volcanic ash. The eruption followed ~ 10,000 years of quiescence, was the largest explosive eruption globally since Hudson, Chile, in 1991, and was the first explosive rhyolitic eruption since Novarupta, Alaska, in 1912. Field examinsation of distal ashfall indicates that ~ 1.6 x 10¹¹ kg of ash (dense rock equivalent volume of ~ 0.07 km³) was deposited over ~ 2 x 10⁵ km² of Argentina during the first week of eruption. The minimum eruption magnitude, estimated from the mass of the tephra deposit, is 4.2. Several discrete ashfall units are identifiable from their distribution and grain size characteristics, with more energetic phases showing a bimodal size distribution and evidence of cloud aggregation processes. Ash chemistry was uniform throughout the early stages of eruption and is consistent with magma storage prior to eruption at depths of 3-6 km. Deposition of ash over a continental region allowed the tracking of eruption development and demonstrates the potential complexity of tephra dispersal from a single eruption, which in this case comprised several phases over a week-long period of intense activity.
spellingShingle Earth sciences
Watt, S
Pyle, D
Mather, T
Martin, R
Matthews, N
Fallout and distribution of volcanic ash over Argentina following the May 2008 explosive eruption of Chaitén, Chile
title Fallout and distribution of volcanic ash over Argentina following the May 2008 explosive eruption of Chaitén, Chile
title_full Fallout and distribution of volcanic ash over Argentina following the May 2008 explosive eruption of Chaitén, Chile
title_fullStr Fallout and distribution of volcanic ash over Argentina following the May 2008 explosive eruption of Chaitén, Chile
title_full_unstemmed Fallout and distribution of volcanic ash over Argentina following the May 2008 explosive eruption of Chaitén, Chile
title_short Fallout and distribution of volcanic ash over Argentina following the May 2008 explosive eruption of Chaitén, Chile
title_sort fallout and distribution of volcanic ash over argentina following the may 2008 explosive eruption of chaiten chile
topic Earth sciences
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