2008
DOI: 10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2008.01.028
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Satellite measurements of recent volcanic activity at Oldoinyo Lengai, Tanzania

Abstract: Oldoinyo Lengai (OL) is the only active volcano in the world that produces natrocarbonatite lava. These carbonate-rich lavas are unique in that they have relatively low temperatures (495-590°C) and very low viscosity. OL has been erupting intermittently since 1983, mostly with small lava flows, pools and spatter cones (hornitos) confined to the summit crater. Explosive, ash-producing eruptions are rare, however, on September 4, 2007 the Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) cap… Show more

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Cited by 47 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…The latter also shows that the analyzed parameter increased in magnitude during 22-25 August because of a documented lava effusion, while it decreased in the following two days (when Q rad was retrieved around 7 MW on MODIS data of 27 August at 22:25 UTC). Afterwards (i.e., during 28-30 August), a new increase in the intensity of thermal emissions was recorded, indicating the possible occurrence of a lava overflow or the presence of an active lava lake within the crater, in agreement with that reported in a previous study [34]. The RGB product from EO1-ALI imagery of 29 August 2007, shown in Figure 5, further confirms this hypothesis.…”
Section: Quantifying Thermal Emissions At Olsupporting
confidence: 90%
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“…The latter also shows that the analyzed parameter increased in magnitude during 22-25 August because of a documented lava effusion, while it decreased in the following two days (when Q rad was retrieved around 7 MW on MODIS data of 27 August at 22:25 UTC). Afterwards (i.e., during 28-30 August), a new increase in the intensity of thermal emissions was recorded, indicating the possible occurrence of a lava overflow or the presence of an active lava lake within the crater, in agreement with that reported in a previous study [34]. The RGB product from EO1-ALI imagery of 29 August 2007, shown in Figure 5, further confirms this hypothesis.…”
Section: Quantifying Thermal Emissions At Olsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…Three days later, once again increased reaching about 250 MW (comparable values of this parameter were retrieved on both Aqua and Terra-MODIS scenes), although the radiant flux reached its peak on 1 September, when the lava flowed down the volcano flanks [54]. Since the Afterwards (i.e., during 28-30 August), a new increase in the intensity of thermal emissions was recorded, indicating the possible occurrence of a lava overflow or the presence of an active lava lake within the crater, in agreement with that reported in a previous study [34]. The RGB product from EO1-ALI imagery of 29 August 2007, shown in Figure 5, further confirms this hypothesis.…”
Section: Quantifying Thermal Emissions At Olsupporting
confidence: 88%
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“…In historical times several explosive eruptions interrupted the natrocarbonatite effusive activity, erupting mixed silicate-carbonate ashes (Dawson et al, 1968(Dawson et al, , 1992 and carbonated silicate ashes and lapilli, as in the recent activity phase from September 4th of 2007 through the early summer of 2008 (Mitchell and Dawson, 2007;Vaughan et al, 2008;Reusser and Mattsson, 2008;Keller and Klaudius, 2008;Keller et al, 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%