Terrestrial laser scanning observations of geomorphic changes and varying lava lake levels at Erebus volcano, Antarctica

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2015.02.011Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • One of the first applications of TLS observations to monitor an erupting volcano

  • Quantifies cyclic periodicity in the level and volumetric changes of a lava lake

  • The TLS data shows unsteady flow of magma in the conduit of Erebus volcano.

  • We document the evolution of the lava lake at Erebus volcano over the last 50 years.

  • TLS allows unprecedented accuracy in visualizing features in the volcano.

Abstract

A Terrestrial Laser Scanning (TLS) instrument was used to image the topography of the Main Crater at Erebus volcano each December in 2008, 2009, and 2010. Our high-spatial resolution TLS scans provide unique insights into annual and decadal scale geomorphic evolution of the summit area when integrated with comparable data collected by an airborne instrument in 2001. We observe both a pattern of subsidence within the Inner Crater of the volcano and an ~ 3 m per-year drop in the lava lake level over the same time period that are suggestive of decreasing overpressure in an underlying magma reservoir. We also scanned the active phonolite lava lake hosted within the Inner Crater, and recorded rapid cyclic fluctuations in the level of the lake. These were sporadically interrupted by minor explosions by bursting gas bubbles at the lake surface. The TLS data permit calculation of lake level rise and fall speeds and associated rates of volumetric change within the lake. These new observations, when considered with prior determinations of rates of lake surface motion and gas output, are indicative of unsteady magma flow in the conduit and its associated variability in gas volume fraction.

Keywords

Erebus
TLS
Lidar
Geomorphology
Lava lake

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