Title of article :
Anomalous Emissions of SO2 During the Recent Eruption of Santa Ana Volcano, El Salvador, Central America
Author/Authors :
Rodolfo Olmos، نويسنده , , Jose Barrancos، نويسنده , , Claudia Rivera، نويسنده , , Francisco Barahona، نويسنده , , Dina L. Lopez، نويسنده , , Benancio Henriquez، نويسنده , , Agust?n Hernandez، نويسنده , , Efrain Benitez، نويسنده , , Pedro A. Hernandez، نويسنده , , Nemesio M. Perez، نويسنده , , Bo Galle ، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
Santa Ana volcano in western El Salvador, Central America, had a phreatic eruption at 8:05 am
(local time) on October 1, 2005, 101 years after its last eruption. However, during the last one hundred years this
volcano has presented periods of quiet degassing with fumarolic activity and an acidic lake within its crater. This
paper presents results of frequent measurements of SO2 degassing using the MiniDOAS (Differential Optical
Absorption Spectroscopy) system and a comparison with the volcanic seismicity prior to the eruption, during,
and after the eruption. Vehicle measurements of SO2 flux were taken every hour during the first nine days of the
eruption and daily after that. The period of time reported here is from August to December, 2005. Three periods
of degassing are distinguished: pre-eruptive, eruptive, and post-eruptive periods. The intense activity at Santa
Ana volcano started in July 2005. During the pre-eruptive period up to 4306 and 5154 ton/day of SO2 flux were
recorded on October 24 and September 9, 2005, respectively. These values were of the same order of magnitude
as the recorded values just after the October 1st eruption (2925 ton/day at 10:01 am). Hourly measurements of
SO2 flux taken during the first nine days after the main eruptive event indicate that explosions are preceded by an
increase in SO2 flux and that this parameter reaches a peak after the explosion took place. This behavior suggests
that increasing accumulation of exsolved magmatic gases occurs within the magmatic chamber before the
explosions, increasing the pressure until the point of explosion. A correlation between SO2 fluxes and RSAM
(Real Time Seismic Amplitude Measurements) is observed during the complete sampling period. Periodic
fluctuations in the SO2 and RSAM values during the entire study period are observed. One possible mechanism
explaining these fluctuations it that convective circulation within the magmatic chamber can bring fresh magma
periodically to shallow levels, allowing increasing degasification and then decreasing degasification as the batch
of magma lowers its gas content, becomes denser, and sinks to give space to a new magma pulse. These results
illustrate that the measurements of SO2 flux can provide important warning signals for incoming explosive
activity in active volcanoes.
Keywords :
RSAM , magma degassing , Santa Ana volcano. , volcanic eruption , Sulfur dioxide flux
Journal title :
Pure and Applied Geophysics
Journal title :
Pure and Applied Geophysics