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Geomorphology of Tagoro Volcano Along Eruptive and Posteruptive Phases

Authors :
Vázquez, Juan Tomás
Sánchez-Guillamón, Olga
Palomino, Desirée
Fernández-Salas, L.M.
Bárcenas-Gascón, Patricia
Gómez-Ballesteros, María
Tello-Antón, María Olvido
López-González, Nieves
Presas-Navarro, Carmen
Fraile-Nuez, Eugenio
Vázquez, Juan Tomás
Sánchez-Guillamón, Olga
Palomino, Desirée
Fernández-Salas, L.M.
Bárcenas-Gascón, Patricia
Gómez-Ballesteros, María
Tello-Antón, María Olvido
López-González, Nieves
Presas-Navarro, Carmen
Fraile-Nuez, Eugenio
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The Spanish Institute of Oceanography has realized nineteen oceanographic cruises in order to monitor the geomorphological changes during the submarine eruption of the Tagoro volcano and later evolution. The major geomorphological features were achieved fundamentally by the use of Multibeam EM710 echosounder data. Eruption was characterized by two main phases, the first one alternate stages of vertical growth and denudation by development of basal and southern flank collapses of the main edifice took place; the second phase was characterized by a fissure growth with a NNW-SSE trend. The eruption produced a main volcanic edifice rising from 400 to 88 m water depth. The edifice consists of four attached cones extended and at least fifteen emission vents. This edifice has a quasi-circular base and its final morphology was modulated by the activity of emission vents during the second phase which produced a NNW-SSE elongated summit line. Both vertical growth and instability phases were conditioned by preexistent southwestwards gradient of the seafloor slope and its initial location into a gully on the southern submarine island flank. In the proximal area, morphology is also characterized in by four ridges that correspond to semi-buried residual scars of different collapse phases. On the SW flank an apron of mixed lavas, pyroclastic and debris flows were deposited along more than 5 km length. These deposits were channeled throughout the previous gully and three parts are differentiated: proximal apron from the cone to an intermediate ravine located at 2.5 km away from the base of the main edifice where its maximum thickness occur in an accumulation front, the intermediated ravine and the distal apron fan deposits from the mouth of the ravine to 1800 m depth. The Tagoro volcano was built during a monogenetic eruption dominated by pyroclastic and lava balloon emissions, with lava emissions in the deepest vents. Its evolution alternating constructive and destructive stages a

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1416002876
Document Type :
Electronic Resource