2011
DOI: 10.1038/nature10541
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The role of dyking and fault control in the rapid onset of eruption at Chaitén volcano, Chile

Abstract: Rhyolite is the most viscous of liquid magmas, so it was surprising that on 2 May 2008 at Chaitén Volcano, located in Chile's southern Andean volcanic zone, rhyolitic magma migrated from more than 5 km depth in less than 4 hours (ref. 1) and erupted explosively with only two days of detected precursory seismic activity. The last major rhyolite eruption before that at Chaitén was the largest volcanic eruption in the twentieth century, at Novarupta volcano, Alaska, in 1912. Because of the historically rare and e… Show more

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Cited by 70 publications
(61 citation statements)
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“…Rapid ascent of the rhyolite magma from storage along the sill resulted from vertical propagation of the dike beneath the volcano. The net decrease in volume of these three source bodies was about 10-30% of the estimated volume of erupted material (see below), which Wicks et al (2011) concludes was an expected consequence of magma compressibility.…”
Section: New Insights From the Eruptionmentioning
confidence: 76%
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“…Rapid ascent of the rhyolite magma from storage along the sill resulted from vertical propagation of the dike beneath the volcano. The net decrease in volume of these three source bodies was about 10-30% of the estimated volume of erupted material (see below), which Wicks et al (2011) concludes was an expected consequence of magma compressibility.…”
Section: New Insights From the Eruptionmentioning
confidence: 76%
“…It is located approximately in the middle of, but inland from, the zone ruptured during the M w 9.5 great Chilean earthquake of 1960 (Wang et al, 2007). Deformation modeling by Wicks et al (2011) suggests that the 2008-2009 eruption of Chaitén was fueled by magma that resides along an east-northeast dipping reverse fault related to the LOFZ (also see Piña-Gauthier et al, 2013, this volume).…”
Section: Tectonic Influences On the Southern Volcanic Zone Of The Chimentioning
confidence: 97%
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