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Solidified magma reservoir derived from active source seismic experiments in the Aira caldera, southern Kyushu, Japan

Authors :
Hiroki Miyamachi
Hiroshi Yakiwara
Reiji Kobayashi
Shuichiro Hirano
Takeshi Kubo
Masakazu Souda
Kenyu Sakao
Naohiro Unno
Takeshi Matsushima
Kazunari Uchida
Rintaro Miyamachi
Kenshin Isoda
Yoshiko Teguri
Yoshinosuke Kamiya
Agnis Triahadini
Hiroshi Shimizu
Hiroshi Katao
Takuo Shibutani
Takeshi Tameguri
Yusuke Yamashita
Tsutomu Miura
Jun Nakagawa
Itaru Yoneda
Shinya Kato
Kosei Takishita
Kazuho Nakai
Yuta Maeda
Toshiki Watanabe
Shinichiro Horikawa
Kenjiro Matsushiro
Takashi Okuda
Shuhei Tsuji
Naoki Sogawa
Daima Hasegawa
Kazuo Nakahigashi
Eiji Kurashimo
Tomoaki Yamada
Hideji Abe
Miwako Ando
Shinichi Tanaka
Satoshi Ikezawa
Takaya Iwasaki
Masanao Shinohara
Toshinori Sato
Mare Yamamoto
Ryosuke Azuma
Satoshi Hirahara
Takashi Nakayama
Syuichi Suzuki
Shuhei Otomo
Ryota Hino
Tomoki Tsutsui
Yusuke Inoue
Ryuichi Takei
Yuya Tada
Hiroaki Takahashi
Yoshio Murai
Hiroshi Aoyama
Mako Ohzono
Takahiro Shiina
Masamitsu Takada
Masayoshi Ichiyanagi
Teruhiro Yamaguchi
Natsuki Ono
Kazuma Saito
Chihiro Ito
Yuuki Susukida
Tatsuya Nakagaki
Yasuhisa Tanaka
Yasuhiko Akinaga
Source :
Earth, Planets and Space, Vol 75, Iss 1, Pp 1-21 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
SpringerOpen, 2023.

Abstract

Abstract The Aira caldera, located in southern Kyushu, Japan, originally formed 100 ka, and its current shape reflects the more recent 30 ka caldera-forming eruptions (hereafter, called the AT eruptions). This study aimed to delineate the detailed two-dimensional (2D) seismic velocity structure of the Aira caldera down to approximately 15 km, by means of the travel-time tomography analysis of the seismic profile across the caldera acquired in 2017 and 2018. A substantial structural difference in thickness in the subsurface low-velocity areas in the Aira caldera between the eastern and western sides, suggest that the Aira caldera comprises at least two calderas, identified as the AT and Wakamiko calderas. The most interesting feature of the caldera structure is the existence of a substantial high-velocity zone (HVZ) with a velocity of more than 6.8 km/s at depths of about 6–11 km beneath the central area of the AT caldera. Because no high ratio of P- to S-wave velocity zones in the depth range were detected from the previous three-dimensional velocity model beneath the AT caldera region, we infer that the HVZ is not an active magma reservoir but comprises a solidified and cool remnant. In addition, a poorly resolved low-velocity zone around 15 km in depth suggests the existence of a deep active magma reservoir. By superimposing the distribution of the known pressure sources derived from the observed ground inflation and the volcanic earthquake distribution onto the 2D velocity model, the magma transportation path in the crust was imaged. This image suggested that the HVZ plays an important role in magma transportation in the upper crust. Moreover, we estimated that the AT magma reservoir in the 30 ka Aira caldera-forming eruptions has the total volume of 490 km3 DRE and is distributed in a depth range of 4–11 km. Graphical Abstract

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18805981
Volume :
75
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Earth, Planets and Space
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.1e29d23af242619869e46f3401513b
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40623-023-01919-z