Abstract :
A fundamental goal of volcano seismology is to understand active magmatic systems, to
characterize the configuration of such systems, and to determine the extent and evolution of source regions
of magmatic energy. Such understanding is critical to our assessment of eruptive behavior and its
hazardous impacts. With the emergence of portable broadband seismic instrumentation, availability of
digital networks with wide dynamic range, and development of new powerful analysis techniques, rapid
progress is being made toward a synthesis of high-quality seismic data to develop a coherent model of
eruption mechanics. Examples of recent advances are: (1) high-resolution tomography to image subsurface
volcanic structures at scales of a few hundred meters; (2) use of small-aperture seismic antennas to map
the spatio-temporal properties of long-period (LP) seismicity; (3) moment tensor inversions of verylong-
period (VLP) data to derive the source geometry and mass-transport budget of magmatic fluids;
(4) spectral analyses of LP events to determine the acoustic properties of magmatic and associated
hydrothermal fluids; and (5) experimental modeling of the source dynamics of volcanic tremor. These
promising advances provide new insights into the mechanical properties of volcanic fluids and subvolcanic
mass-transport dynamics. As new seismic methods refine our understanding of seismic sources, and
geochemical methods better constrain mass balance and magma behavior, we face new challenges in
elucidating the physico-chemical processes that cause volcanic unrest and its seismic and gas-discharge
manifestations. Much work remains to be done toward a synthesis of seismological, geochemical, and
petrological observations into an integrated model of volcanic behavior. Future important goals must
include: (1) interpreting the key types of magma movement, degassing and boiling events that produce
characteristic seismic phenomena; (2) characterizing multiphase fluids in subvolcanic regimes and
determining their physical and chemical properties; and (3) quantitatively understanding multiphase fluid
flow behavior under dynamic volcanic conditions. To realize these goals, not only must we learn how to
translate seismic observations into quantitative information about fluid dynamics, but we also must
determine the underlying physics that governs vesiculation, fragmentation, and the collapse of bubble-rich
suspensions to form separate melt and vapor. Refined understanding of such processes—essential for
quantitative short-term eruption forecasts—will require multidisciplinary research involving detailed field
measurements, laboratory experiments, and numerical modeling.
Keywords :
high-resolution tomography , Long-period events , laboratory experiments with analog fluids , fluid-filled crack model , Q , very-long-period seismicity , magmatic transport , Hydrothermal systems , Sompi method.