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Eruption of South Sarigan Seamount, Northern Mariana Islands: Insights into Hazards from Submarine Volcanic Eruptions

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Title Eruption of South Sarigan Seamount, Northern Mariana Islands: Insights into Hazards from Submarine Volcanic Eruptions
Names Embley, Robert W. (creator)
Tamura, Yoshihiko (creator)
Merle, Susan G. (creator)
Sato, Tomoki (creator)
Chadwick, William W., Jr. (creator)
et al. (creator)
Date Issued 2014-06 (iso8601)
Note To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contributing to this work. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the Oceanography Society and can be found at: http://www.tos.org/oceanography/index.html.
Abstract The eruption of South Sarigan Seamount in the southern Mariana arc
in May 2010 is a reminder of how little we know about the hazards associated with
submarine explosive eruptions or how to predict these types of eruptions. Monitored
by local seismometers and distant hydrophones, the eruption from ~ 200 m water
depth produced a gas and ash plume that breached the sea surface and rose ~ 12 km
into the atmosphere. This is one of the first instances for which a wide range of pre- and
post-eruption observations allow characterization of such an event on a shallow
submarine volcanic arc volcano. Comparison of bathymetric surveys before and after
the eruptions of the South Sarigan Seamount reveals the eruption produced a 350 m
diameter crater, deeply breached on the west side, and a broad apron downslope with
deposits > 50 m thick. The breached summit crater formed within a pre-eruption
dome-shaped summit composed of andesite lavas. Dives with the Japan Agency for
Marine-Earth Science and Technology Hyper-Dolphin remotely operated vehicle
sampled the wall of the crater and the downslope deposits, which consist of andesite
lava blocks lying on pumiceous gravel and sand. Chemical analyses show that the
andesite pumice is probably juvenile material from the eruption. The unexpected
eruption of this seamount, one of many poorly studied shallow seamounts of
comparable size along the Mariana and other volcanic arcs, underscores our lack of
understanding of submarine hazards associated with submarine volcanism.
Genre Article
Identifier Embley, R.W., Y. Tamura, S.G. Merle, T. Sato, O. Ishizuka, W.W. Chadwick Jr., D.A. Wiens, P. Shore, and R.J. Stern. 2014. Eruption of South Sarigan Seamount, Northern Mariana Islands: Insights into hazards from submarine volcanic eruptions. Oceanography 27(2):24–31. doi:10.5670/oceanog.2014.37

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