Leachate Analyses of volcanic ashes from the 2010 Eyjafjallajökull eruption

Volcanic processes which lead to eruptions can be investigated by monitoring a variety of parameters, including the composition of ash leachates. Fine-grained tephra erupted from active vents, and transported through volcanic plumes, can adsorb, and therefore rapidly scavenge, volatile elements such...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bagnato, E, Pistolesi, M, Bertagnini, A, Bonadonna, C, Cioni, R, AIUPPA, Alessandro, PEDONE, Maria
Other Authors: Aiuppa, A, Pedone, M
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10447/76197
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Summary:Volcanic processes which lead to eruptions can be investigated by monitoring a variety of parameters, including the composition of ash leachates. Fine-grained tephra erupted from active vents, and transported through volcanic plumes, can adsorb, and therefore rapidly scavenge, volatile elements such as sulphur, halogens, and metal species in the form of soluble salts adhering to ash surfaces. Analysis of such water-soluble surface materials is a suitable complement for the remote sensing of volcanic gases at inaccessible volcanoes. The April 2010 Eyjafjallajökull eruption has been characterised by several distinct phases, with an initial effusion of alkali basalt on the volcano's northeast flank since March 20th, followed (since April 14th) by a complex summit, sustained, explosive to mixed activity, characterised by trachyandesitic magma The first phase of the summit eruption (14 to 18 April) was initially characterised by interaction between glacial meltwater from the icecap and erupting magma, and by three main pulses during which dark ash plumes were dispersed to the SE and S. Following a decrease in the intensity in explosive activity associated to the emission of a lava flow (from 19 April to 4 May), activity renewed in intensity on 5 May, when an ash-laden plume, up to 10 km in height, was continuously dispersed until May 18. Activity progressively declined and eruption closed on 9 June [1]. Here, we report on the chemical composition of leachates from volcanic ash samples deposited during the Eyjafjallajökull explosive phase (from 14 April to 8 May). Twenty-eight freshly fallen volcanic ash samples were collected at various distances from the eruptive vent, and their leached solutions were analyzed for major and trace elements. We show that ash leachate solutions from Eyjafjallajökull are dominated - among cations - by Na and Ca, while they display nearly equal S:Cl:F abundances (mean S/Cl and S/F molar ratios of 1.04 and 0.76 respectively), as characteristic of divergent-plate and within-plate ...