Earthquake Sequence 1973–1996 in Bárðarbunga Volcano: Seismic Activity Leading up to Eruptions in the NW-Vatnajökull Area

A day and a half after the earthquake (mb=5.3, MS=5.6, MW=5.6) in the Bárðarbunga central volcano on Sept. 29th 1996, a volcanic eruption broke out under the Vatnajökull glacier. The eruption was located approximately 20 km SSE of the earthquake epicenter, midway between the Bárðarbunga and Grímsvöt...

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Main Author: Bjarnason, Ingi Þorleifur
Other Authors: Raunvísindastofnun (HÍ), Science Institute (UI), Verkfræði- og náttúruvísindasvið (HÍ), School of Engineering and Natural Sciences (UI), Háskóli Íslands, University of Iceland
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Iceland Glaciological Society and Geoscience Society of Iceland 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11815/505
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author Bjarnason, Ingi Þorleifur
author2 Raunvísindastofnun (HÍ)
Science Institute (UI)
Verkfræði- og náttúruvísindasvið (HÍ)
School of Engineering and Natural Sciences (UI)
Háskóli Íslands
University of Iceland
author_facet Bjarnason, Ingi Þorleifur
author_sort Bjarnason, Ingi Þorleifur
collection Unknown
description A day and a half after the earthquake (mb=5.3, MS=5.6, MW=5.6) in the Bárðarbunga central volcano on Sept. 29th 1996, a volcanic eruption broke out under the Vatnajökull glacier. The eruption was located approximately 20 km SSE of the earthquake epicenter, midway between the Bárðarbunga and Grímsvötn central volcanoes. Course of events suggests a connection between earthquake and eruption and therefore a connection with a sequence of earthquakes of the same characteristics in Bárðarbunga during the years 1973–1996. The earthquakes in question are of an unusually low frequency character (corner frequency), explained by exceptionally low dynamic stress drop (< 10 bars) at shallow depth ( 5.0 km). The sequence which lasted for 22 years is characterised by annual main events of magnitudes in the range of 4.5–5.7 (mb). It intensified in the 1990s, with some of the largest earthquakes of the whole episode occurring at that time. Moment tensor solutions of teleseismic signals and locally recorded waveforms reveal that the main events are thrust faulting earthquakes with a significant non-double couple component. Arguments are presented that the faulting occurred on a steeply inward dipping caldera fault, with reactivated motion on a weak fault. As a consequence of this hypothesis magma inflation in Bárðarbunga is the most probable cause of the 1973– 1996 events. However, the loading force (the magma) may or may not have resided at a similar shallow depth as the earthquakes. Cast in the frame of the inflation model, the Bárðarbunga 1973–1996 sequence implies a resurgent caldera of at least 0.2–0.7 km3 for approximately a quarter of a century, exceeding its magma storage capacity in 1996. However, these calculations are model dependent. Bárðarbunga and neighbouring area were relatively calm during the period mid-1997 to 2004. There was a renewed activity of small earthquakes during the years 2005–2009. From the beginning of continuous seismic recording in Iceland in 1925, all eruptions in Vatnajökull on record have ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
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Iceland
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spelling ftopinvisindi:oai:opinvisindi.is:20.500.11815/505 2025-06-15T14:27:46+00:00 Earthquake Sequence 1973–1996 in Bárðarbunga Volcano: Seismic Activity Leading up to Eruptions in the NW-Vatnajökull Area Bjarnason, Ingi Þorleifur Raunvísindastofnun (HÍ) Science Institute (UI) Verkfræði- og náttúruvísindasvið (HÍ) School of Engineering and Natural Sciences (UI) Háskóli Íslands University of Iceland 2014 61-82 https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11815/505 en eng Iceland Glaciological Society and Geoscience Society of Iceland Jöklarannsóknafélags Íslands og Jarðfræðafélags Íslands Jökull;64 http://jokulljournal.is/2014-64.html https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11815/505 Jökull info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Jarðskjálftar Jarðskjálftavirkni Eldstöðvar Eldgos Jarðskorpa Bárðarbunga Vatnajökull info:eu-repo/semantics/article 2014 ftopinvisindi https://doi.org/20.500.11815/505 2025-05-23T03:05:41Z A day and a half after the earthquake (mb=5.3, MS=5.6, MW=5.6) in the Bárðarbunga central volcano on Sept. 29th 1996, a volcanic eruption broke out under the Vatnajökull glacier. The eruption was located approximately 20 km SSE of the earthquake epicenter, midway between the Bárðarbunga and Grímsvötn central volcanoes. Course of events suggests a connection between earthquake and eruption and therefore a connection with a sequence of earthquakes of the same characteristics in Bárðarbunga during the years 1973–1996. The earthquakes in question are of an unusually low frequency character (corner frequency), explained by exceptionally low dynamic stress drop (< 10 bars) at shallow depth ( 5.0 km). The sequence which lasted for 22 years is characterised by annual main events of magnitudes in the range of 4.5–5.7 (mb). It intensified in the 1990s, with some of the largest earthquakes of the whole episode occurring at that time. Moment tensor solutions of teleseismic signals and locally recorded waveforms reveal that the main events are thrust faulting earthquakes with a significant non-double couple component. Arguments are presented that the faulting occurred on a steeply inward dipping caldera fault, with reactivated motion on a weak fault. As a consequence of this hypothesis magma inflation in Bárðarbunga is the most probable cause of the 1973– 1996 events. However, the loading force (the magma) may or may not have resided at a similar shallow depth as the earthquakes. Cast in the frame of the inflation model, the Bárðarbunga 1973–1996 sequence implies a resurgent caldera of at least 0.2–0.7 km3 for approximately a quarter of a century, exceeding its magma storage capacity in 1996. However, these calculations are model dependent. Bárðarbunga and neighbouring area were relatively calm during the period mid-1997 to 2004. There was a renewed activity of small earthquakes during the years 2005–2009. From the beginning of continuous seismic recording in Iceland in 1925, all eruptions in Vatnajökull on record have ... Article in Journal/Newspaper glacier Iceland Vatnajökull Unknown Vatnajökull ENVELOPE(-16.823,-16.823,64.420,64.420)
spellingShingle Jarðskjálftar
Jarðskjálftavirkni
Eldstöðvar
Eldgos
Jarðskorpa
Bárðarbunga
Vatnajökull
Bjarnason, Ingi Þorleifur
Earthquake Sequence 1973–1996 in Bárðarbunga Volcano: Seismic Activity Leading up to Eruptions in the NW-Vatnajökull Area
title Earthquake Sequence 1973–1996 in Bárðarbunga Volcano: Seismic Activity Leading up to Eruptions in the NW-Vatnajökull Area
title_full Earthquake Sequence 1973–1996 in Bárðarbunga Volcano: Seismic Activity Leading up to Eruptions in the NW-Vatnajökull Area
title_fullStr Earthquake Sequence 1973–1996 in Bárðarbunga Volcano: Seismic Activity Leading up to Eruptions in the NW-Vatnajökull Area
title_full_unstemmed Earthquake Sequence 1973–1996 in Bárðarbunga Volcano: Seismic Activity Leading up to Eruptions in the NW-Vatnajökull Area
title_short Earthquake Sequence 1973–1996 in Bárðarbunga Volcano: Seismic Activity Leading up to Eruptions in the NW-Vatnajökull Area
title_sort earthquake sequence 1973–1996 in bárðarbunga volcano: seismic activity leading up to eruptions in the nw-vatnajökull area
topic Jarðskjálftar
Jarðskjálftavirkni
Eldstöðvar
Eldgos
Jarðskorpa
Bárðarbunga
Vatnajökull
topic_facet Jarðskjálftar
Jarðskjálftavirkni
Eldstöðvar
Eldgos
Jarðskorpa
Bárðarbunga
Vatnajökull
url https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11815/505