Short-period volcanic gas precursors to phreatic eruptions: Insights from Poás Volcano, Costa Rica

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2016.02.056Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Changes in volcanic lake gas emissions precede phreatic eruptions.

  • First identified short-term precursor to phreatic eruptions.

  • Sulfur scrubbing can be negligible in hyper-acid volcanic lake environment.

  • Gas flux measurements allow quantification of hydrothermal system energy budget.

  • Transient pulses of magmatic gas cause phreatic eruptions.

Abstract

Volcanic eruptions involving interaction with water are amongst the most violent and unpredictable geologic phenomena on Earth. Phreatic eruptions are exceptionally difficult to forecast by traditional geophysical techniques. Here we report on short-term precursory variations in gas emissions related to phreatic blasts at Poás volcano, Costa Rica, as measured with an in situ multiple gas analyzer that was deployed at the edge of the erupting lake. Gas emitted from this hyper-acid crater lake approaches magmatic values of SO2/CO2 1–6 days prior to eruption. The SO2 flux derived from magmatic degassing through the lake is measureable by differential optical absorption spectrometry (sporadic campaign measurements), which allows us to constrain lake gas output and input for the major gas species during eruptive and non-eruptive periods. We can further calculate power supply to the hydrothermal system using volatile mass balance and thermodynamics, which indicates that the magmatic heat flux into the shallow hydrothermal system increases from ∼27 MW during quiescence to ∼59 MW during periods of phreatic events. These transient pulses of gas and heat from the deeper magmatic system generate both phreatic eruptions and the observed short-term changes in gas composition, because at high gas flux scrubbing of sulfur by the hydrothermal system is both kinetically and thermodynamically inhibited whereas CO2 gas is always essentially inert in hyperacid conditions. Thus, the SO2/CO2 of lake emissions approaches magmatic values as gas and power supply to the sub-limnic hydrothermal system increase, vaporizing fluids and priming the hydrothermal system for eruption. Our results suggest that high-frequency real-time gas monitoring could provide useful short-term eruptive precursors at volcanoes prone to phreatic explosions.

Keywords

volcanic gas
phreatic eruption
eruption precursor
volcanic lake
hydrothermal system
Poás volcano

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