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What Triggers Caldera Ring‐Fault Subsidence at Ambrym Volcano? Insights From the 2015 Dike Intrusion and Eruption
Author(s) -
Shreve T.,
Grandin R.,
Smittarello D.,
Cayol V.,
Pinel V.,
Boichu M.,
Morishita Y.
Publication year - 2021
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 - 10.1029/2020jb020277
Subject(s) - geology , caldera , dike , seismology , volcano , magma chamber , fault (geology) , magma , lava , petrology , slip (aerodynamics) , interferometric synthetic aperture radar , subsidence , geomorphology , synthetic aperture radar , physics , remote sensing , thermodynamics , structural basin
Surface deformation accompanying dike intrusions is dominated by uplift and horizontal motion directly related to the intrusions. In some cases, it includes subsidence due to associated magma reservoir deflation. When reservoir deflation is large enough, it can form, or reactivate preexisting, caldera ring‐faults. Ring‐fault reactivation, however, is rarely observed during moderate‐sized eruptions. On February 21, 2015 at Ambrym volcano in Vanuatu, a basaltic dike intrusion produced more than 1 m of coeruptive uplift, as measured by InSAR, synthetic aperture radar correlation, and Multiple Aperture Interferometry. Here, we show that an average of ∼40 cm of slip occurred on a normal caldera ring‐fault during this moderate‐sized (VEI < 3) event, which intruded a volume of ∼24 × 10 6 m 3 and erupted ∼9.3 × 10 6 m 3 of lava (DRE). Using the 3D Mixed Boundary Element Method, we explore the stress change imposed by the opening dike and the depressurizing reservoir on a passive, frictionless fault. Normal fault slip is promoted when stress is transferred from a depressurizing reservoir beneath one of Ambrym's main craters. After estimating magma compressibility, we provide an upper bound on the critical fraction ( f = 7%) of magma extracted from the reservoir to trigger fault slip. We infer that broad basaltic calderas may form in part by hundreds of subsidence episodes no greater than a few meters, as a result of magma extraction from the reservoir during moderate‐sized dike intrusions.