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Airborne measurements of particle and gas emissions from the 1990 volcanic eruptions of Mount Redoubt
Author(s) -
Hobbs Peter V.,
Radke Lawrence F.,
Lyons Jamie H.,
Ferek Ronald J.,
Coffman Derek J.,
Casadevall Thomas J.
Publication year - 1991
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/91jd01635
Subject(s) - volcano , atmospheric sciences , atmosphere (unit) , volcanic ash , environmental science , sulfate , flux (metallurgy) , mineralogy , geology , meteorology , chemistry , physics , geochemistry , organic chemistry
Airborne in situ and remote sensing (lidar and correlation spectrometer) measurements are described for the volcanic emissions from Mount Redoubt, Alaska, in January and June 1990. The lidar provided excellent real‐time information on the distribution of the volcanic effluents. In postanalysis the lidar observations were used to determine cross‐sectional areas of the plumes of emissions which, together with the airborne in situ measurements, were used to derive the fluxes of particles and gases from the volcano. For the intraeruptive emissions the ranges of the derived fluxes were for water vapor, ∼160–9440 kg s −1 ; for CO 2 , ∼30–1710 kg s −1 ; for SO 2 , ∼1–140 kg s −1 ; for particles (<48 μm diameter), ∼1–6 kg s −1 ; for SO 4 = , <0.1–2 kg s −1 ; for HCl, <0.01–2 kg s −1 ; and for NO x , <0.1–2 kg s −1 ;. Independent measurements of SO 2 from a correlation spectrometer during the period of active dome growth between late March and early June 1990 gave fluxes from 12 to 75 kg s −1 ;. The particles in the intraeruptive emissions consisted primarily of silicate rock and mineral fragments devoid of any sulfuric acid coating. Very little of the SO 2 (∼0.1%) was oxidized to sulfate in the cold, dark conditions of the Arctic atmosphere. During a large eruption of Mount Redoubt on January 8, 1990, the particle (<48 μm diameter) emission flux averaged ∼10 4 kg s −1 . During posteruptive emissions on June 11, 1990, the fluxes of both particles and gases were either close to or less than our lower detection limits (except for water vapor, which had a flux of ∼6×10 3 kg s −1 ).

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