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Volcano‐Tectonic Interactions at Sabancaya Volcano, Peru: Eruptions, Magmatic Inflation, Moderate Earthquakes, and Fault Creep
Author(s) -
MacQueen Patricia,
Delgado Francisco,
Reath Kevin,
Pritchard Matthew E.,
Bagnardi Marco,
Milillo Pietro,
Lundgren Paul,
Macedo Orlando,
Aguilar Victor,
Ortega Mayra,
Anccasi Rosa,
Lazarte Zerpa Ivonne Alejandra,
Miranda Rafael
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: solid earth
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.983
H-Index - 232
eISSN - 2169-9356
pISSN - 2169-9313
DOI - 10.1029/2019jb019281
Subject(s) - geology , seismology , fault (geology) , volcano , induced seismicity , creep , tectonics , magma , stress field , materials science , composite material , physics , finite element method , thermodynamics
Abstract We present evidence of volcano‐tectonic interactions at Sabancaya volcano that we relate to episodic magma injection and high regional fluid pore pressures. We present a surface deformation time series at Sabancaya including observations from ERS‐1/2, Envisat, Sentinel‐1, COSMO‐SkyMed, and TerraSAR‐X that spans June 1992 to February 2019. These data show deep‐seated inflation northwest of Sabancaya from 1992–1997 and 2013–2019, as well as creep and rupture on multiple faults. Afterslip on the Mojopampa fault following a 2013 M W 5.9 earthquake is anomalously long lived, continuing for at least 6 years. The best fit fault plane for the afterslip is right‐lateral motion on an EW striking fault at 1 km depth. We also model surface deformation from two 2017 earthquakes (M W 4.4 and M W 5.2) on unnamed faults, for which the best fit models are NW striking normal faults at 1–2 km depth. Our best fit model for a magmatic inflation source (13 km depth, volume change of 0.04 to 0.05 km 3  yr −1 ) induces positive Coulomb static stress changes on these modeled fault planes. Comparing these deformation results with evidence from satellite thermal and degassing data, field observations, and seismic records, we interpret strong pre‐eruptive seismicity at Sabancaya as a consequence of magmatic intrusions destabilizing tectonic faults critically stressed by regionally high fluid pressures. High fluid pressure likely also promotes fault creep driven by static stress transfer from the inflation source. We speculate that combining high pore fluid pressures with sufficiently large, offset magmatic inflation can promote strong earthquakes during volcanic unrest.

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