Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2122/16970
Authors: McCormick Kilbride, Brendan* 
Nicholson, E J* 
Wood, Kieran* 
Wilkes, Thomas Charles* 
Schipper, C I* 
Mulina, Kila* 
Itikarai, Ima* 
Richardson, Thomas* 
Werner, C* 
Hayer, Catherine* 
Esse, Benjamin* 
Burton, Mike* 
Pering, Tom D.* 
McGonigle, Andrew J. S.* 
Coppola, Diego* 
Bitetto, Marcello* 
Giudice, Gaetano* 
Aiuppa, Alessandro* 
Title: Temporal Variability in Gas Emissions at Bagana Volcano Revealed by Aerial, Ground, and Satellite Observations
Journal: Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems 
Series/Report no.: /24 (2023)
Publisher: Wiley-Agu
Issue Date: 2023
DOI: 10.1029/2022GC010786
Keywords: Volcanic gas
UAS
Bagana Volcano
Subject Classification04.08. Volcanology 
Abstract: Bagana is a remote, highly active volcano, located on Bougainville Island in southeastern Papua New Guinea. The volcano has exhibited sustained and prodigious sulfur dioxide gas emissions in recent decades, accompanied by frequent episodes of lava extrusion. The remote location of Bagana and its persistent activity have made it a valuable case study for satellite observations of active volcanism. This remoteness has also left many features of Bagana relatively unexplored. Here, we present the first measurements of volcanic gas composition, achieved by unoccupied aerial system (UAS) flights through the volcano's summit plume, and a payload comprising a miniaturized MultiGAS. We combine our measurements of the molar CO2/SO2 ratio in the plume with coincident remote sensing measurements (ground- and satellite-based) of SO2 emission rate to compute the first estimate of CO2 flux at Bagana. We report low SO2 and CO2 fluxes at Bagana from our fieldwork in September 2019, ∼320 ± 76 td −1 and ∼320 ± 84 td −1, respectively, which we attribute to the volcano's low level of activity at the time of our visit. We use satellite observations to demonstrate that Bagana's activity and emissions behavior are highly variable and advance the argument that such variability is likely an inherent feature of many volcanoes worldwide and yet is inadequately captured by our extant volcanic gas inventories, which are often biased to sporadic measurements. We argue that there is great value in the use of UAS combined with MultiGAS-type instruments for remote monitoring of gas emissions from other inaccessible volcanoes.
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