Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2122/12537
Authors: Boudoire, G.* 
Finizola, A.* 
Di Muro, A.* 
Peltier, A.* 
Liuzzo, Marco* 
Grassa, Fausto* 
Delcher, E.* 
Brunet, C.* 
Boissier, P.* 
Chaput, M.* 
Ferrazzini, V.* 
Gurrieri, Sergio* 
Title: Small-scale spatial variability of soil CO2 flux: Implication for monitoring strategy
Journal: Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research 
Series/Report no.: /366 (2018)
Issue Date: 2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2018.10.001
Abstract: In recent decades, soil CO2 flux measurements have been often used in both volcanic and seismically active areas to investigate the interconnections between temporal and spatial anomalies in degassing and telluric activities. In this study, we focus on a narrow degassing area of the Piton de la Fournaise volcano, that has been chosen for its proximity and link with the frequently active volcanic area. Our aim is to constrain the degassing in this narrow area and identify the potential processes involved in both spatial and temporal soil CO2 variations in order to provide an enhanced monitoring strategy for soil CO2 flux. We performed a geophysical survey (self-potential measurements: SP; electrical resistivity tomography: ERT) to provide a high-resolution description of the subsurface. We identified one main SP negative anomaly dividing the area in two zones. Based on these results, we set ten control points, from the site of the main SP negative anomaly up to 230 m away, where soil CO2 fluxes were weekly measured during one year of intense eruptive activity at Piton de la Fournaise. Our findings show that lateral and vertical soil heterogeneities and structures exert a strong control on the degassing pattern. We find that temporal soil CO2 flux series at control points close to the main SP negative anomaly better record variations linked to the volcanic activity. We also show that the synchronicity between the increase of soil CO2 flux and deep seismicity can be best explained by a pulsed process pushing out the CO2 already stored and fractionated in the system. Importantly, our findings show that low soil CO2 fluxes and low carbon isotopic signature are able to track variations of volcanic activity in the same way as high fluxes and high carbon isotopic signature do. This result gives important insights in terms of monitoring strategy of volcanic and seismotectonic areas in geodynamics contexts characterized by difficult environmental operational conditions as commonly met in tropical area
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