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The influence of edifice slope and substrata on volcano spreading.

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The influence of edifice slope and substrata on volcano spreading. / Delcamp, Audray; van Wyk de Vries, Benjamin; James, Mike R.
In: Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, Vol. 177, No. 4, 20.11.2008, p. 925-943.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Delcamp, A, van Wyk de Vries, B & James, MR 2008, 'The influence of edifice slope and substrata on volcano spreading.', Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, vol. 177, no. 4, pp. 925-943. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2008.07.014

APA

Delcamp, A., van Wyk de Vries, B., & James, M. R. (2008). The influence of edifice slope and substrata on volcano spreading. Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, 177(4), 925-943. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2008.07.014

Vancouver

Delcamp A, van Wyk de Vries B, James MR. The influence of edifice slope and substrata on volcano spreading. Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research. 2008 Nov 20;177(4):925-943. doi: 10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2008.07.014

Author

Delcamp, Audray ; van Wyk de Vries, Benjamin ; James, Mike R. / The influence of edifice slope and substrata on volcano spreading. In: Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research. 2008 ; Vol. 177, No. 4. pp. 925-943.

Bibtex

@article{f3b7fff4832c497ca1b128a2edd88877,
title = "The influence of edifice slope and substrata on volcano spreading.",
abstract = "Gravitational volcano spreading is caused by flow of weak substrata due to volcanic loading, and is now a process known to affect many edifices. The process produces extension in the upper edifice, evidenced by gr{\"a}ben and normal faults, and compression at the base, seen in strike–slip faults and thrusts. Where spreading is identified, host volcanoes have a range of fault densities, variable rift and gr{\"a}ben shapes, and different degrees of structural asymmetry. Previous studies have suggested a link between edifice shape and structure and the proportion of brittle to ductile material in the substrata or lower edifice. We study this link using refined sand cone analogue models standing on a brittle–ductile/sand–silicone substrata. Two scenarios have been investigated, the first mainly represents oceanic volcanoes with a ductile layer within the edifice (type I), where there is an outer ductile free surface. The second represents most continental volcanoes that have ductile substrata (type II). We apply the model results to natural examples and develop quantitative relationships between slope, brittle–ductile ratio fault density, spreading rate and structural style. Displacement fields calculated from stereophotogrammetry show significant differences between different slope models. We find that more faults are produced when the cone is initially steeper, or when the brittle substratum is thinner. However, the effect of the brittle layer dominates over that of slope. The strike–slip movements are found to be an essential feature in the spreading mechanism and the gr{\"a}ben are in fact transtensional features. Strike–slip and graben faults make a conjugate flower pattern. The structures produced are well-organised for type II edifices, but they are poorly organised for type I models. Type I models represent good analogues for oceanic volcanoes that are commonly affected by large slumps bounded by an extensional zone and lack of well-formed sector gr{\"a}ben. The well-observed connection between oceanic volcano rifts and large landslide-slumps is confirmed to be a consequence of spreading.",
keywords = "volcano spreading, edifice morphology, sector Gr{\"a}ben, faulting, oceanic volcano",
author = "Audray Delcamp and {van Wyk de Vries}, Benjamin and James, {Mike R.}",
year = "2008",
month = nov,
day = "20",
doi = "10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2008.07.014",
language = "English",
volume = "177",
pages = "925--943",
journal = "Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research",
issn = "0377-0273",
publisher = "Elsevier Science B.V.",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The influence of edifice slope and substrata on volcano spreading.

AU - Delcamp, Audray

AU - van Wyk de Vries, Benjamin

AU - James, Mike R.

PY - 2008/11/20

Y1 - 2008/11/20

N2 - Gravitational volcano spreading is caused by flow of weak substrata due to volcanic loading, and is now a process known to affect many edifices. The process produces extension in the upper edifice, evidenced by gräben and normal faults, and compression at the base, seen in strike–slip faults and thrusts. Where spreading is identified, host volcanoes have a range of fault densities, variable rift and gräben shapes, and different degrees of structural asymmetry. Previous studies have suggested a link between edifice shape and structure and the proportion of brittle to ductile material in the substrata or lower edifice. We study this link using refined sand cone analogue models standing on a brittle–ductile/sand–silicone substrata. Two scenarios have been investigated, the first mainly represents oceanic volcanoes with a ductile layer within the edifice (type I), where there is an outer ductile free surface. The second represents most continental volcanoes that have ductile substrata (type II). We apply the model results to natural examples and develop quantitative relationships between slope, brittle–ductile ratio fault density, spreading rate and structural style. Displacement fields calculated from stereophotogrammetry show significant differences between different slope models. We find that more faults are produced when the cone is initially steeper, or when the brittle substratum is thinner. However, the effect of the brittle layer dominates over that of slope. The strike–slip movements are found to be an essential feature in the spreading mechanism and the gräben are in fact transtensional features. Strike–slip and graben faults make a conjugate flower pattern. The structures produced are well-organised for type II edifices, but they are poorly organised for type I models. Type I models represent good analogues for oceanic volcanoes that are commonly affected by large slumps bounded by an extensional zone and lack of well-formed sector gräben. The well-observed connection between oceanic volcano rifts and large landslide-slumps is confirmed to be a consequence of spreading.

AB - Gravitational volcano spreading is caused by flow of weak substrata due to volcanic loading, and is now a process known to affect many edifices. The process produces extension in the upper edifice, evidenced by gräben and normal faults, and compression at the base, seen in strike–slip faults and thrusts. Where spreading is identified, host volcanoes have a range of fault densities, variable rift and gräben shapes, and different degrees of structural asymmetry. Previous studies have suggested a link between edifice shape and structure and the proportion of brittle to ductile material in the substrata or lower edifice. We study this link using refined sand cone analogue models standing on a brittle–ductile/sand–silicone substrata. Two scenarios have been investigated, the first mainly represents oceanic volcanoes with a ductile layer within the edifice (type I), where there is an outer ductile free surface. The second represents most continental volcanoes that have ductile substrata (type II). We apply the model results to natural examples and develop quantitative relationships between slope, brittle–ductile ratio fault density, spreading rate and structural style. Displacement fields calculated from stereophotogrammetry show significant differences between different slope models. We find that more faults are produced when the cone is initially steeper, or when the brittle substratum is thinner. However, the effect of the brittle layer dominates over that of slope. The strike–slip movements are found to be an essential feature in the spreading mechanism and the gräben are in fact transtensional features. Strike–slip and graben faults make a conjugate flower pattern. The structures produced are well-organised for type II edifices, but they are poorly organised for type I models. Type I models represent good analogues for oceanic volcanoes that are commonly affected by large slumps bounded by an extensional zone and lack of well-formed sector gräben. The well-observed connection between oceanic volcano rifts and large landslide-slumps is confirmed to be a consequence of spreading.

KW - volcano spreading

KW - edifice morphology

KW - sector Gräben

KW - faulting

KW - oceanic volcano

U2 - 10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2008.07.014

DO - 10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2008.07.014

M3 - Journal article

VL - 177

SP - 925

EP - 943

JO - Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research

JF - Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research

SN - 0377-0273

IS - 4

ER -