phreatomagmatic eruptions in Karymskoye lake, Kamchatka, Russia A

On 2-3 January 1996 an explosive eruption discharging = l06 kgs-1 of basaltic magma occurred in Karymskoye lake at an initial water depth of ~ 50 m. Characteristics of the deposits together with analyses of a videotape of several explosions have allowed us to model the eruptive events. Initial vent-...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: A. Belousov, M. Belousova
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.602.9587
http://www.kscnet.ru/ivs/bibl/vulk/kozero/lake.pdf
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Summary:On 2-3 January 1996 an explosive eruption discharging = l06 kgs-1 of basaltic magma occurred in Karymskoye lake at an initial water depth of ~ 50 m. Characteristics of the deposits together with analyses of a videotape of several explosions have allowed us to model the eruptive events. Initial vent-clearing phreatic explosions ejected blocks of country rocks (up to 3 m diameter) to distances of up to 1.3 km. Then followed 10- 20 h of phreatomagmatic Surtseyan activity (100-200 outbursts of water-gas-pyroclastic mixtures to heights of up to 1 km, with initial velocities of 110 m s-1|. The eruption slugs collapsed back into the lake and produced base surges (runout up to 1.3 km; average velocity 12.5 m s-1). The convective eruption plume rose to a height of 3 km and deposited a thin distal fall deposit. The eruption ended with the ejection of scoria-crust bombs (specific basaltic bombs with dense core and scoriaceous crust). Pyroclasts of the eruption are mostly poorly to moderately vesicular juvenile basaltic particles shaped by a combination of magmatic vesiculation and magma-water interaction. Ninety-five percent of the products (0.047 km3) formed an underwater tuff ring composed of parallel layers of moderately to poorly sorted lapilli ash and ash lapilli (Md- 3.9 to 0.6 phi; sorting 1.5-3.2 phi), each 10-60 cm thick. They were deposited by water-rich base surges that originated from Surtseyan type eruption bursts. The most widespread hazards of