InSAR and GPS ground deformation along the Kivu segment of the East African Rift during the 2011-2012 Nyamulagira eruption
Discipline
Earth and related Environmental sciences
Subject
Natural hazards
Audience
Scientific
Date
2018Metadata
Show full item recordDescription
Along  the  East  African  Rift  lie  several  active  volcanoes  characterized  by  different  eruptive  styles  and  magma  plumbing systems. In this particular environment it is crucial to study ground deformation to better understand the  interaction between tectonic, local stress and magma movements.  Here we used InSAR and GPS data to measure ground displacement associated with the 2011-2012 Nyamulagira  eruption. Nyamulagira is an active shield volcano with a central caldera, located in the Democratic Republic of  Congo along the Kivu segment of the East African Rift. It is characterized by cycle of short-lived flank eruptions  (sometimes accompanied by intra-crateral activity) every 1-4 yr, and less frequent long-lived eruptions usually  emitting larger volumes of lava from eruptive vents most of the time located >8 km from the central caldera and  with longer repose time. The 2011-2012 Nyamulagira eruption is one of these long-lived events. The eruption  lasted  from  November  6  2011  to  April  2012.  This  is  the  last  Nyamulagira  eruption,  even  if,  since  2014,  an  intermittent lava lake re-appeared within the caldera. Nyamilagira is located within the Virunga National park and  is surrounded by a dense tropical forest. This limit the use of the InSAR technique and, with the frequent political  instabilities, make difficult to access the area to install monitoring stations (that are located at >10 km from the  caldera).  However,  InSAR  data  from  different  satellites  allowed  measuring  ground  displacements  associated  with  the  eruption. In particular, deformation time series, obtained with the short revisiting time COSMO SkyMed satellite,  allowed detecting a very fast (one day) magmatic intrusion below the eastern flank two days prior to the eruption  onset. It also allowed the detection of the subsequent intrusion that brought the magma up to the two eruptive  vents located 11km ENE from the caldera.  Using analytical models we jointly inverted two interferograms with different looking geometries to assess source  parameters and mechanisms of magma emplacement. We tested different type of sources to find the most suitable  one  for  this  eruption,  given  the  observed  deformation  and  the  volcano-tectonic  context.  Considering  also  the  GPS and seismic data acquired during the eruptive period by four stations, our analysis suggest that the eruption  was a complex sequence of a deflation of a shallow magma chamber (  ∼  3km below the caldera) that fed a sill  intrusion toward the ENE direction (parallel to the rift axis) that twisted into a dyke and brought the magma up  to the surface. Furthermore, the geophysical observations suggest the presence of a deep magmatic source that  possibly fed the shallower magmatic system. This event contrasts with classical flank eruptions, which commonly  involve only a shallow magma chamber that fed sub-vertical dykes aligned NW-SE suggesting a different control  mechanisms of magma emplacement.
Citation
Nobile, A.; Geirsson, H.; Smets, B.; Subira, J.M.; d'Oreye, N.; Kervyn, F. (2018). InSAR and GPS ground deformation along the Kivu segment of the East African Rift during the 2011-2012 Nyamulagira eruption. , EGU General Assembly 2018, Vienna, Austria, April 8-13 2018,Identifiers
Type
Conference
Peer-Review
Yes
Language
eng
