Proposing a Fresh Theory Unraveling the Phenomenon of Volcanic Fountaining

Proposing a Fresh Theory Unraveling the Phenomenon of Volcanic Fountaining

A ⁢team of Earth scientists, meteorologists, geologists, and volcanologists from‌ multiple institutions has developed ⁢a new‌ theory to explain the nature of volcanic fountaining. In their project, reported in the journal Nature Communications,‌ the group‍ studied the 2021 eruption of the Fagradalsfjall volcano​ in Iceland, which produced ‍what some have described as ⁣spectacular ⁣examples of volcanic fountaining.

Volcanic⁤ fountaining is when a volcano⁢ erupts as depicted in cartoons, with red-hot lava shooting straight up into ‌the sky before falling back down to Earth and cascading down the sides of a caldera.⁤ How and why they form ​and what drives their⁣ energy is still⁤ not known, though some in the field have ⁣suggested it is due to rapid magma ascent. In this new effort, the research team took advantage of the ⁢unique characteristics of the Fagradalsfjall eruption to ​learn more about fountaining.

The eruption of Fagradalsfjall⁣ in 2021 did not happen all at once as a big⁤ blast. Instead, it occurred as a series ​of fountains of various heights. The fountains⁣ were also reasonably well contained, which allowed the researchers ​to‍ move close to the action to learn more about what was driving the fountain formation.

To study the eruptions, the research team used a device that allowed them to ‌conduct open-path Fourier transform infrared (OP-FTIR) spectroscopy on the gases emitted from the volcano over four cycles of eruption and pauses. Then, by studying the chemical composition of the gases, they found ⁣attributes⁤ that suggested an explanation for a volcano fountaining rather than simply blowing its top. And that led ⁤them⁢ to a theory.

The new theory suggests that volcanos like Fagradalsfjall have a shallow‌ cavity beneath their caldera filled with magma. As magma ascends into the cavity, gases lead to a foam layer ​at the top of the magma inside⁣ the cavity. Collapse of the foam layer, the researchers‍ suggest, is what leads to the pressure that pushes magma into the air, creating a fountain effect—like soda from a shaken can. The cyclic nature of such⁣ fountaining is due to gases repeatedly creating a foam layer inside the cavity.

2023-11-26 11:41:02
Article from phys.org rnrn

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