Sulfur Degassing From Steam-Heated Crater Lakes: El Chichón (Chiapas, Mexico) and Víti (Iceland)

The composition of the gases released by El Chichón (Chiapas, Mexico) and Víti (Askja volcano, Iceland) volcanic lakes is examined by Multi-GAS for the first time. Our results demonstrate that H2S and SO2 are degassed by these pH 2–3 lakes. We find higher CO2/H2S and H2/H2S ratios in the lakes'...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Geophysical Research Letters
Main Authors: Hasselle, N., Rouwet, D., Aiuppa, A., Jácome-Paz, M. P., Pfeffer, M., Taran, Y., Campion, R., Bitetto, M., Giudice, G., Bergsson, B.
Other Authors: Hasselle, N.*, Jácome-Paz, M.P.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10447/347054
https://doi.org/10.1029/2018GL079012
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1029/2018GL079012
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Summary:The composition of the gases released by El Chichón (Chiapas, Mexico) and Víti (Askja volcano, Iceland) volcanic lakes is examined by Multi-GAS for the first time. Our results demonstrate that H2S and SO2 are degassed by these pH 2–3 lakes. We find higher CO2/H2S and H2/H2S ratios in the lakes' emissions (31–5,685 and 0.6–35, respectively) than in the fumarolic gases feeding the lakes (13–33 and 0.08–0.5, respectively), evidencing that only a fraction (0.2–5.4% at El Chichón) of the H2S(g) contributed by the subaquatic fumaroles ultimately reaches the atmosphere. At El Chichón, we estimate a H2S output from the crater lake of 0.02–0.06t/day. Curiously, SO2 is also detected at trace levels in the gases released from both lakes (0.003–0.3ppmv). We propose that H2S supplied into the lakes initiates a series of complex oxidation reactions, having sulfite as an intermediate product, and ultimately leading to SO2 production and degassing.