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Resurgent Toba—field, chronologic, and model constraints on time scales and mechanisms of resurgence at large calderas

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Title Resurgent Toba—field, chronologic, and model constraints on time scales and mechanisms of resurgence at large calderas
Names de Silva, Shanaka L. (creator)
Mucek, Adonara E. (creator)
Gregg, Patricia M. (creator)
Pratomo, Indyo (creator)
Date Issued 2015-06-09 (iso8601)
Note This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the author(s) and published by the Frontiers Research Foundation. The published article can be found at: http://journal.frontiersin.org/journal/earth-science.
Abstract Highlights: New data reveal for the first time a history of the last ∼33.7 ky of uplift of Samosir. Minimum uplift rates were high (4.9 cm/year) for the first 11.2 ky but diminished after that to <1 cm/year for the last 22.5 ky. Numerical modeling suggests that rebound of remnant magma augmented by deep
recharge appears to be the most likely driver for uplift. Detumescence makes a negligible contribution to resurgent uplift. The volume of the resurgent dome is isostatically compensated by magma. Average rates of uplift at Toba are much lower than currently restless calderas indicating a distinction between resurgence and “restlessness”.
New data reveal details of the post-caldera history at the Earth’s youngest resurgent
supervolcano, Toba caldera in Sumatra. Resurgence after the caldera-forming ∼74 ka
Youngest Toba Tuff eruption uplifted the caldera floor as a resurgent dome, Samosir
Island, capped with 100m of lake sediments. ¹⁴C age data from the uppermost datable
sediments reveal that Samosir Island was submerged beneath lake level (∼900 m a.s.l)
at 33 ka. Since then, Samosir experienced 700 m of uplift as a tilted block dipping
to the west. ¹⁴C ages and elevations of sediment along a transect of Samosir reveal
that minimum uplift rates were ∼4.9 cm/year from ∼33.7 to 22.5 ka, but diminished
to ∼0.7 cm/year after 22.5 ka. Thermo-mechanical models informed by these rates reveal
that detumescence does not produce the uplift nor the uplift rates estimated for Samosir.
However, models calculating the effect of volume change of the magma reservoir within a
temperature-dependent viscoelastic host rock reveal that a single pulse of ∼475 km³ of
magma produces a better fit to the uplift data than a constant flux. The cause of resurgent
uplift of the caldera floor is rebound of remnant magma as the system re-established
magmastatic and isostatic equilibrium after the caldera collapse. Previous assertions that
the caldera floor was apparently at 400 m a.s.l or lower requires that uplift must have
initiated between sometime between 33.7 and 74 ka at a minimum average uplift rate
of ∼1.1 cm/year. The change in uplift rate from pre-33.7 ka to immediately post-33.7 ka
suggests a role for deep recharge augmenting rebound. Average minimum rates of resurgent uplift at Toba are at least an order of magnitude slower than net rates
of “restlessness” at currently active calderas. This connotes a distinction between
resurgence and “restlessness” controlled by different processes, scales of process, and
controlling variables.
Genre Article
Access Condition http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/us/
Topic Carbon-14 dating
Identifier De Silva, S. L., Mucek, A. E., Gregg, P. M., & Pratomo, I. (2015). Resurgent Toba–field, chronologic, and model constraints on time scales and mechanisms of resurgence at large calderas. Frontiers in Earth Science, 3, 25. doi:10.3389/feart.2015.00025

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