(USGS - Hawaiian Volcano Observatory) and Daniele Carbone
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(USGS - Hawaiian Volcano Observatory) and Daniele Carbone
V21B-2771 A foamy lava lake at Kīlauea Volcano, Hawai‘i Michael P. Poland (USGS - Hawaiian Volcano Observatory) and Daniele Carbone (Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, Catania, Italy) CONTINUOUS GRAVITY AT KĪLAUEA gravimeter housing solar panel Hawaiian Volcano Observatory N19˚ 30' HAWAI‘I ISLAND summit caldera W155˚ 00' Kamoamoa fissure eruption gravimeter Halemaʻumaʻu Crater summit eruptive vent Hawai‘i Island thermal camera Kīlauea Caldera gravimeter Puʻu ʻŌʻō Crater rift t s ea e zon N19˚ 20' battery box W155˚ 10' 10 km 250 m On March 5, 2011, the lava lake within Kīlauea’s summit vent drained as magma withdrew from beneath the caldera to feed a fissure eruption on the east rift zone. The lava level was monitored by a thermal camera and the continuous gravimeter. wall of Halema‘uma‘u Crater Halema‘uma‘u Crater G-721 former high lava mark LaCoste & Romberg gravimeter G-721 is installed on the floor of Kīlauea Caldera near the rim of Halema‘uma‘u Crater. Data are recorded on a serial datalogger and stored locally. 200 small lava pond 250 200 150 100 50 0 -50 980 Lava level (m a.s.l.) 940 920 900 880 860 840 820 800 -400 200 Gravity change (μGal) Gravity change (μgals) Lava level was estimated from continuous views of the lava lake by a thermal camera on the rim of Halema‘uma‘u Crater. Lake draining began at about 2 PM HST—just after the start of an intrusion along the east rfit zone (based on seismicity and deformation). The level dropped by ~150 m in <24 hours. Data courtesy Matt Patrick. 960 -200 -600 -800 -1000 150 100 50 0 -50 -100 04 March 2011 12.00 HST February 2011 March 2011 April 2011 Example three-month time series from gravimeter G-721. The long-term gravity signal reflects a combination of mass change, solid Earth tides, environmental factors, and instrument drift. Halema‘uma‘u Crater 0 Thermal camera Higher lava level 05 March 2011 00.00 HST 05 March 2011 12.00 HST 06 March 2011 00.00 HST Continuous gravity data, corrected for solid Earth tides, mass loss from the 1.5-km-deep contracting magma reservoir, and ground subsidence (determined from GPS). The decrease in gravity tracks the drop in lava level, implying that the gravity change is due to mass removal from the lava lake. Spikes are caused by local earthquakes. The lava level drop over time and the geometry of the vent are known from visual observations, so it is possible to calculate the lava density needed to fit the gravity signal. Schematic cross section through Halema‘uma‘u Crater showing the geometry of the lava lake in early 2011. Sketch is based on visual observations, courtesy Tim Orr. lava lake 200m Model of lava lake 200m m 0 14 970m a.s.l. Changeable level of overhang base floor of Halema‘uma‘u Crater GPS data from a station collocated with the continuous gravimeter. Gray line gives 30 s positions, and red line is low-pass filtered. Data indicate subsidence coincident with the start of lava lake draining. Subsidence is due to volume loss from a source about 1.5 km beneath the east margin of Halema‘uma‘u Crater. 300 -100 0 Schematic cross section through Halema‘uma‘u Crater Gravimeter Changeable lava level (Left): The Kamoamoa fissure eruption occurred during March 5–9, 2011, on Kīlauea’s east rift zone. Photo by Tim Orr. (Right): Near-vertical FLIR image from a helicopter of Kīlauea’s summit vent on March 8, 2011, after lava had drained and the level had dropped by about 150 m. Photo by Matt Patrick. Elevation changes (mm) G-721 is a LaCoste & Romberg gravimeter with an Aliod feedback system. Data are recorded every 0.5 s, including gravity, instrument temperature, voltage, long level, and cross level. The gravimeter is collocated with a GPS station. We constructed a model of the lava lake and changed the model lake height to match the thermal camera observations. We then calculated the gravity effect of the changing lake level, varying the lake density to fit the gravity data. rim of summit eruptive vent 1 km Image acquired by NASA’s Advanced Land Imager, Earth-Observing-1 satellite. LAVA LAKE DENSITY Model of lava lake. Geometry is based on visual observations of the vent (overhanging top is probably only a few meters thick). Model consists of 224 vertical square-based (10×10 m) parallelepipeds with changeable height. The gravity effect of each parallelepiped is calculated and the total effect is obtained by summing their contributions. Lava level changes are simulated by changing the height of the “active” parallelepipeds. Using the lava level determined from the thermal camera, we perform a direct calculation aimed at assessing the value of lava density that yields the best fit to the gravity changes. Bottom (800m a.s.l.) 160m RESULT: The gravity change can be modeled by -3 an average lava lake density of 800 kg m . 200 Gravity change (μGal) N W155˚ 20' so u rif thw tz e on st e Since the summer of 2010, the USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory (HVO) has operated a continuously recording gravimeter on the rim of Kīlauea’s summit eruptive vent. MARCH 5, 2011, LAVA LAKE DRAINAGE 150 100 50 0 -50 Gravity data, corrected for tides, subsurface mass loss, and vertical deformation (black line), can be approximated from the lava lake draw down assuming an average lava density of 800 kg m-3 (red line). All gravity data fall within a 600–1000 kg m-3 envelope (light red field). 600 kg m -3 1000 kg m -3 800 kg m-3 -100 04 March 2011 12:00 HST 05 March 2011 00:00 HST 05 March 2011 12:00 HST 06 March 2011 00:00 HST Although surprisingly low, the modeled density is consistent with that of clasts ejected from the vent (Carey et al., 2012).
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