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CRUMBLING OF DACITE DOME LAVA AND GENERATION OF PYROCLASTIC FLOWS AT UNZEN VOLCANO
Author(s): SATO H, FUJII T, NAKADA S
Source: NATURE    Volume: 360    Issue: 6405    Pages: 664-666    Published: DEC 17 1992  
Times Cited: 97     References: 22     
Abstract: RECENT modelling of volcanic eruptions has shown that the efficiency of subsurface degassing of magmas determines whether magma erupts explosively or effuses quietly1,2. Slow uprise of magma is often accompanied by effective degassing, leading to the extrusion of lava flows and domes. Although lava dome extrusion is one of the less explosive modes of eruption, it is often accompanied by explosive pyroclastic activities3-5. The 1991 eruption of Unzen volcano provided an opportunity to observe at close range several types of small-scale pyroclastic flow (glowing avalanches) originating from lava domes. Most of the pyroclastic flows are of Merapi type, caused by blocks falling from a collapsing dome; others are of Pelean type originating in an explosion from the side of a dome. The lavas apparently show variable degrees of self-explosivity. We suggest that variable degrees of degassing of the magma produced a wide range of excess pore pressures in the extruded lava domes, resulting in both Merapi-type and Pelean-type pyroclastic flows from the domes.
Document Type: Article
Language: English
Reprint Address: SATO, H (reprint author), HIROSHIMA UNIV, FAC INTEGRATED ARTS & SCI, DEPT NAT ENVIRONM SCI, HIROSHIMA 730, JAPAN
Addresses:
1. UNIV TOKYO, EARTHQUAKE RES INST, BUNKYO KU, TOKYO 113, JAPAN
2. KYUSHU UNIV, FAC SCI, DEPT EARTH & PLANETARY SCI, FUKUOKA 812, JAPAN
Publisher: MACMILLAN MAGAZINES LTD, PORTERS SOUTH, 4 CRINAN ST, LONDON, ENGLAND N1 9XW
Subject Category: Multidisciplinary Sciences
IDS Number: KD082
ISSN: 0028-0836
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