The eruptions of Örӕfajökull 1362 (Iceland) and Lanzarote 1730-36 (Canary Islands) : sulphur emissions and volcanology

This thesis presents new data on the volcanology, erupted volumes, and sulphur emissions of the AD 1362 Örӕfajökull eruption and the AD 1730-36 Lanzarote eruption, and relates these findings to their atmospheric and environmental impacts. The Örӕfajökull eruption was an explosive Plinian event with...

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Main Author: Sharma, Kirti
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:https://oro.open.ac.uk/54488/
https://oro.open.ac.uk/54488/1/441159.pdf
https://doi.org/10.21954/ou.ro.0000d4d8
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spelling ftopenunivgb:oai:oro.open.ac.uk:54488 2023-06-11T04:12:43+02:00 The eruptions of Örӕfajökull 1362 (Iceland) and Lanzarote 1730-36 (Canary Islands) : sulphur emissions and volcanology Sharma, Kirti 2005 application/pdf https://oro.open.ac.uk/54488/ https://oro.open.ac.uk/54488/1/441159.pdf https://doi.org/10.21954/ou.ro.0000d4d8 unknown https://oro.open.ac.uk/54488/1/441159.pdf Sharma, Kirti <http://oro.open.ac.uk/view/person/ks2355.html> (2005). The eruptions of Örӕfajökull 1362 (Iceland) and Lanzarote 1730-36 (Canary Islands) : sulphur emissions and volcanology. PhD thesis The Open University. Thesis Public PeerReviewed 2005 ftopenunivgb https://doi.org/10.21954/ou.ro.0000d4d8 2023-05-28T05:57:07Z This thesis presents new data on the volcanology, erupted volumes, and sulphur emissions of the AD 1362 Örӕfajökull eruption and the AD 1730-36 Lanzarote eruption, and relates these findings to their atmospheric and environmental impacts. The Örӕfajökull eruption was an explosive Plinian event with high eruption columns (~30 Ian) that produced an extensive tephra-fall and a small pyroclastic flow deposit (~2 km3 total volume). In contrast, the Lanzarote eruption was a long-lasting basaltic fissure eruption involving Hawaiian and Strombolian fire fountain activity (eruption plumes 8-16 km high) generating a scoria fall deposit and lava flows (~5 km3 total volume). Chapter 1 introduces the effects of volcanic gas release, and highlights the importance of SO 2 . In chapter 2, I provide a critical assessment of the petrologic method used to estimate the sulphur release from a volcanic eruption. The petrologic method uses the difference in sulphur concentrations between melt inclusions and matrix glasses, measured by electron microprobe, scaled to the mass of erupted magma, and corrected for the magma crystal content. I show that it provides estimates for sulphur degassing from non-arc, basaltic, reduced magmas that are similar to independent satellite measurements (TOMS). Using this technique, the AD 1362 Örӕfajökulll eruption is estimated to have released only ~0.6 Mt of SO 2 into the stratosphere - supported by lack of an ice core acidity peak. The major environmental hazard resulting from this eruption was large volumes of pumice and ash injected into the upper atmosphere and its subsequent fallout over a wide area (chapter 3). The Lanzarote eruption released at least 45 Mt of SO 2 . This was determined using a new technique based on the correlation between S and incompatible element (K, P, Ti) ratios (S/ I ); knowing this ratio the original S content of a degassed liquid can be calculated from its concentration of I . The release of SO 2 from the Lanzarote eruption is shown to have caused significant climatic ... Thesis ice core Iceland The Open University: Open Research Online (ORO)
institution Open Polar
collection The Open University: Open Research Online (ORO)
op_collection_id ftopenunivgb
language unknown
description This thesis presents new data on the volcanology, erupted volumes, and sulphur emissions of the AD 1362 Örӕfajökull eruption and the AD 1730-36 Lanzarote eruption, and relates these findings to their atmospheric and environmental impacts. The Örӕfajökull eruption was an explosive Plinian event with high eruption columns (~30 Ian) that produced an extensive tephra-fall and a small pyroclastic flow deposit (~2 km3 total volume). In contrast, the Lanzarote eruption was a long-lasting basaltic fissure eruption involving Hawaiian and Strombolian fire fountain activity (eruption plumes 8-16 km high) generating a scoria fall deposit and lava flows (~5 km3 total volume). Chapter 1 introduces the effects of volcanic gas release, and highlights the importance of SO 2 . In chapter 2, I provide a critical assessment of the petrologic method used to estimate the sulphur release from a volcanic eruption. The petrologic method uses the difference in sulphur concentrations between melt inclusions and matrix glasses, measured by electron microprobe, scaled to the mass of erupted magma, and corrected for the magma crystal content. I show that it provides estimates for sulphur degassing from non-arc, basaltic, reduced magmas that are similar to independent satellite measurements (TOMS). Using this technique, the AD 1362 Örӕfajökulll eruption is estimated to have released only ~0.6 Mt of SO 2 into the stratosphere - supported by lack of an ice core acidity peak. The major environmental hazard resulting from this eruption was large volumes of pumice and ash injected into the upper atmosphere and its subsequent fallout over a wide area (chapter 3). The Lanzarote eruption released at least 45 Mt of SO 2 . This was determined using a new technique based on the correlation between S and incompatible element (K, P, Ti) ratios (S/ I ); knowing this ratio the original S content of a degassed liquid can be calculated from its concentration of I . The release of SO 2 from the Lanzarote eruption is shown to have caused significant climatic ...
format Thesis
author Sharma, Kirti
spellingShingle Sharma, Kirti
The eruptions of Örӕfajökull 1362 (Iceland) and Lanzarote 1730-36 (Canary Islands) : sulphur emissions and volcanology
author_facet Sharma, Kirti
author_sort Sharma, Kirti
title The eruptions of Örӕfajökull 1362 (Iceland) and Lanzarote 1730-36 (Canary Islands) : sulphur emissions and volcanology
title_short The eruptions of Örӕfajökull 1362 (Iceland) and Lanzarote 1730-36 (Canary Islands) : sulphur emissions and volcanology
title_full The eruptions of Örӕfajökull 1362 (Iceland) and Lanzarote 1730-36 (Canary Islands) : sulphur emissions and volcanology
title_fullStr The eruptions of Örӕfajökull 1362 (Iceland) and Lanzarote 1730-36 (Canary Islands) : sulphur emissions and volcanology
title_full_unstemmed The eruptions of Örӕfajökull 1362 (Iceland) and Lanzarote 1730-36 (Canary Islands) : sulphur emissions and volcanology
title_sort eruptions of örӕfajökull 1362 (iceland) and lanzarote 1730-36 (canary islands) : sulphur emissions and volcanology
publishDate 2005
url https://oro.open.ac.uk/54488/
https://oro.open.ac.uk/54488/1/441159.pdf
https://doi.org/10.21954/ou.ro.0000d4d8
genre ice core
Iceland
genre_facet ice core
Iceland
op_relation https://oro.open.ac.uk/54488/1/441159.pdf
Sharma, Kirti <http://oro.open.ac.uk/view/person/ks2355.html> (2005). The eruptions of Örӕfajökull 1362 (Iceland) and Lanzarote 1730-36 (Canary Islands) : sulphur emissions and volcanology. PhD thesis The Open University.
op_doi https://doi.org/10.21954/ou.ro.0000d4d8
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