Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Publications

Filter Total Items: 2695

Chronology of Eocene-Miocene sequences on the New Jersey shallow shelf: implications for regional, interregional, and global correlations

Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Expedition 313 continuously cored and logged latest Eocene to early-middle Miocene sequences at three sites (M27, M28, and M29) on the inner-middle continental shelf offshore New Jersey, providing an opportunity to evaluate the ages, global correlations, and significance of sequence boundaries. We provide a chronology for these sequences using integrated strontium
Authors
James V. Browning, Kenneth G. Miller, Peter J. Sugarman, John Barron, Francine M.G. McCarthy, Denise K. Kulhanek, Miriam E. Katz, Mark D. Feigenson

Nyamulagira’s magma plumbing system inferred from 15 years of InSAR

Nyamulagira, located in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo on the western branch of the East African rift, is Africa’s most active volcano, with an average of one eruption every 3 years since 1938. Owing to the socio-economical context of that region, the volcano lacks ground-based geodetic measurements but has been monitored by interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) since 1996
Authors
Christelle Wauthier, Valérie Cayol, Michael P. Poland, François Kervyn, Nicolas D'Oreye, Andrew Hooper, Sergei Samsonov, Kristy Tiampo, Benoit Smets

Very long period conduit oscillations induced by rockfalls at Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii

Eruptive activity at the summit of Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii, beginning in 2010 and continuing to the present time is characterized by transient outgassing bursts accompanied by very long period (VLP) seismic signals triggered by rockfalls from the vent walls impacting a lava lake in a pit within the Halemaumau pit crater. We use raw data recorded with an 11-station broadband network to model the so
Authors
Bernard A. Chouet, Phillip B. Dawson

Pushing the Volcanic Explosivity Index to its limit and beyond: Constraints from exceptionally weak explosive eruptions at Kīlauea in 2008

Estimating the mass, volume, and dispersal of the deposits of very small and/or extremely weak explosive eruptions is difficult, unless they can be sampled on eruption. During explosive eruptions of Halema‘uma‘u Crater (Kīlauea, Hawaii) in 2008, we constrained for the first time deposits of bulk volumes as small as 9–300 m3 (1 × 104 to 8 × 105 kg) and can demonstrate that they show simple exponent
Authors
Bruce F. Houghton, Don Swanson, J. Rausch, R.J. Carey, S.A. Fagents, Tim R. Orr

The Chaitén rhyolite lava dome: Eruption sequence, lava dome volumes, rapid effusion rates and source of the rhyolite magma

We use geologic field mapping and sampling, photogrammetric analysis of oblique aerial photographs, and digital elevation models to document the 2008-2009 eruptive sequence at Chaitén Volcano and to estimate volumes and effusion rates for the lava dome. We also present geochemical and petrologic data that contribute to understanding the source of the rhyolite and its unusually rapid effusion rates
Authors
John S. Pallister, Angela K. Diefenbach, William C. Burton, Jorge Munoz, Julia P. Griswold, Luis E. Lara, Jacob B. Lowenstern, Carolina E. Valenzuela

Seismicity associated with the May 2010 eruption of South Sarigan Seamount, Northern Mariana Islands

On 29 May 2010, at approximately 11:48 UTC, an undersea volcano south of Sarigan in the Northern Mariana Islands (Figs. 1 and 2) erupted sending a cloud of volcanic ash and water vapor to 40,000 feet (12 km; Washington Volcanic Ash Advisory Center). Bathymetric data (Stern and Smoot, 1998; Embley et al., 2007) indicate an undersea vent exists at approximately 16.582° N and 145.821° E or about 12 k
Authors
Cheryl Searcy

Ambient seismic noise interferometry in Hawai'i reveals long-range observability of volcanic tremor

The use of seismic noise interferometry to retrieve Green's functions and the analysis of volcanic tremor are both useful in studying volcano dynamics. Whereas seismic noise interferometry allows long-range extraction of interpretable signals from a relatively weak noise wavefield, the characterization of volcanic tremor often requires a dense seismic array close to the source. We here show that s
Authors
Silke Ballmer, Cecily Wolfe, Paul G. Okubo, Matthew M. Haney, Clifford H. Thurber

Preliminary report on the Late Pleistocene and Holocene diatoms of Swamp Lake, Yosemite National Park, California, USA

Swamp Lake, Yosemite National Park, is the only known lake in California containing long sequences of varved sediments and thus has the potential to provide a high-resolution record of climate variability. This preliminary analysis of the diatom assemblages from a 947-cm-long composite sediment core (freeze core FZ02–05; 0–67 cm, Livingstone core 02–05; 53–947 cm) shows that the lake has been fres
Authors
Scott W. Starratt, R. Scott Anderson

Convection in a volcanic conduit recorded by bubbles

Microtextures of juvenile pyroclasts from Kīlauea’s (Hawai‘i) early A.D. 2008 explosive activity record the velocity and depth of convection within the basaltic magma-filled conduit. We use X-ray microtomography (μXRT) to document the spatial distribution of bubbles. We find small bubbles (radii from 5 μm to 70 μm) in a halo surrounding larger millimeter-size bubbles. This suggests that dissolved
Authors
Rebecca J. Carey, Michael Manga, Wim Degruyter, Helge M. Gonnermann, Donald Swanson, Bruce F. Houghton, Tim R. Orr, Matthew R. Patrick

A statistical analysis of the global historical volcanic fatalities record

A new database of volcanic fatalities is presented and analysed, covering the period 1600 to 2010 AD. Data are from four sources: the Smithsonian Institution, Witham (2005), CRED EM-DAT and Munich RE. The data were combined and formatted, with a weighted average fatality figure used where more than one source reports an event; the former two databases were weighted twice as strongly as the latter
Authors
Melanie Rose Auker, Robert Stephen John Sparks, Lee Siebert, H. S. Crosweller, John W. Ewert

Photogrammetric monitoring of lava dome growth during the 2009 eruption of Redoubt Volcano

The 2009 eruption of Redoubt Volcano, Alaska, began with a phreatic explosion on 15 March followed by a series of at least 19 explosive events and growth and destruction of at least two, and likely three, lava domes between 22 March and 4 April. On 4 April explosive activity gave way to continuous lava effusion within the summit crater. We present an analysis of post-4 April lava dome growth using
Authors
Angela K. Diefenbach, Katharine F. Bull, Rick Wessels, Robert G. McGimsey