Options
Temporal variations of helium isotopes in volcanic gases quantify pre-eruptive refill and pressurization in magma reservoirs: The Mount Etna case
Author(s)
Language
English
Obiettivo Specifico
2V. Dinamiche di unrest e scenari pre-eruttivi
Status
Published
JCR Journal
JCR Journal
Peer review journal
Yes
Title of the book
Issue/vol(year)
7/44 (2016)
ISSN
0091-7613
Electronic ISSN
1943-2682
Publisher
Geological Society of America
Pages (printed)
499-502
Issued date
July 2016
Abstract
Two approaches to the challenging aim of forecasting impending eruptions are searching
for empirical precursors and developing suitable interpretative models. Here we present
high-resolution time series of 3He/4He ratios measured in gases emitted from peripheral
vents around Mount Etna volcano (Italy), which revealed variations with strong correlations
over both time and a broad spatial scale. The main eruptive episodes are preceded
by increases in 3He/4He, making this ratio a unique tracer for monitoring volcanic activity.
These features strongly reflect pressurization beneath the volcano due to deep magma influx.
We propose a pioneering model that relates the changes in 3He/4He to the time-dependent
outflow of volatiles from a magmatic chamber subjected to evolution of its internal pressure
due to magma injection. At Mount Etna, the model makes it possible to estimate in
near real time key parameters such as the rate of magma input and volume change in deep
chamber preceding eruptions, and to compare them with geodetic estimations. This represents
an unprecedented use of 3He/4He to obtain quantitative information on the physics of
magmatic systems. Volcanoes showing changes of 3He/4He ratio in discharged gases due to
unrest episodes are widespread in the world, and therefore we envisage extensive future
applications of this approach.
for empirical precursors and developing suitable interpretative models. Here we present
high-resolution time series of 3He/4He ratios measured in gases emitted from peripheral
vents around Mount Etna volcano (Italy), which revealed variations with strong correlations
over both time and a broad spatial scale. The main eruptive episodes are preceded
by increases in 3He/4He, making this ratio a unique tracer for monitoring volcanic activity.
These features strongly reflect pressurization beneath the volcano due to deep magma influx.
We propose a pioneering model that relates the changes in 3He/4He to the time-dependent
outflow of volatiles from a magmatic chamber subjected to evolution of its internal pressure
due to magma injection. At Mount Etna, the model makes it possible to estimate in
near real time key parameters such as the rate of magma input and volume change in deep
chamber preceding eruptions, and to compare them with geodetic estimations. This represents
an unprecedented use of 3He/4He to obtain quantitative information on the physics of
magmatic systems. Volcanoes showing changes of 3He/4He ratio in discharged gases due to
unrest episodes are widespread in the world, and therefore we envisage extensive future
applications of this approach.
Type
article
File(s)
No Thumbnail Available
Name
Paonita et al., 2016_Geology.pdf
Description
published article
Size
736.26 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
68c477c7379323ad5dd3ae94f86455c8
Loading...
Name
G37807-Paonita-Subm.pdf
Description
Open Access
Size
148.01 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
ab94a7f3f94828358de48801b3a55e22