“…The local free‐air gradient depends significantly on the source of deformation and may be different for, for example, post‐glacial rebound (Olsson et al., 2015) compared to volcano deformation involving subsurface fluid redistribution, where the free‐air gradient or Bouguer corrected free‐air gradient (Vajda et al., 2020, 2021) may be more suitable. Free‐body geometry inversions (Camacho et al., 2021) or coupled inversions of surface deformation and gravity (Nikkhoo & Rivalta, 2021) may provide an alternative to recover source parameters; however, mass accumulation without commensurate surface deformation that involves non‐elastic behavior, for example, density changes through degassing or the compressibility of gas‐rich magma (Rivalta & Segall, 2008), makes joint inversions of gravity and deformation nontrivial. Furthermore, because multiple processes and sources may have been active over the 2009–2015 period, we adopted a classical approach, applying a (theoretical) correction for the observed vertical surface deformation before completing point source gravity inversions.…”