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Mauna Loa Eruption Teaches Us More About Volcanoes , Says SU Lava Project Scientist

Tuesday, November 29, 2022, By Daryl Lovell
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College of Arts and SciencesDepartment of Earth and Environmental Sciences

The largest active volcano on Earth erupted Monday. Mauna Loa is one of at least three large 鈥榮hield volcanos鈥� that overlap one another on the Big Island of Hawaii. Mauna Kea and Kilauea 鈥� which erupted in 2018 鈥� are the others. Scientists are working to learn more about this latest activity by Mount Loa.

Jeffrey Karson posing in Iceland

Jeffrey Karson

is Professor Emeritus of Earth and Environmental Sciences at 黑料不打烊 and extensively researches lava flow and interaction with various materials. Professor Karson is one of the directors of the , which allows geologists to create and experiment with 2200掳F lab-created lava in a massive outdoor furnace. Karson has spoken with dozens of news outlets about volcanic eruptions and lava flow including , and .

He provides detailed information and commentary below about the Mauna Loa volcano and the latest eruption, which you are welcome to quote.

Karson says:

鈥淢auna Loa is by far the biggest volcanic mountain on Earth. It is 4,000 m above sea level but there is an additional 6,000 m below sea level, in this deep part of the Pacific Ocean, but also in part because it is so heavy that it has depressed the underlying seafloor, like placing a bowling ball on a mattress. But regardless of its size, it is not the most dangerous volcano. Eruptions that form shield volcanoes are generally small flows of basalt, the most common volcanic rock on Earth (and in the solar system). This is the same type of lava that we experiment with in the . There can be some fire fountaining (lava sprayed upward on the order of 100m) but it will most likely be just lava flows as seen in the 2018 Kilauea eruption or last summer鈥檚 Iceland eruption.

鈥淪mall eruptions like these incrementally build up giant volcanic masses like the big island of Hawaii or Iceland or other ocean islands. Far more dangerous are the large explosive volcanoes of the Pacific rim (Ring of Fire) that occur above subduction zones where ocean lithosphere is shoved back down into the Earth鈥檚 interior, or continental calderas, like Yellowstone. The good news is that basaltic eruptions in places like Hawaii are frequent and not very explosive. The bad news is that larger, more explosive volcanoes erupt less frequently so that we tend to forget about how dangerous they can be.

鈥淢auna Loa is just one volcanic center that formed about a 鈥榟ot spot鈥� of rising, hot, solid mantle material that protrudes upward the Earth鈥檚 surface. As the Pacific plate moves northwest over this hot spot and the volcanic centers it produces, a line of individual seafloor volcanoes (seamounts) to form the Hawaii-Emperor seamount chain that can be traced from the big island to the Aleutians. Each volcano erupted in turn for about 1 million years before becoming inactive and sinking below sea level and being carried along on top of the Pacific plate. Continuing movement will shift the big island to the northwest and a new volcano will emerge to its southeast. We already see a small volcano 鈥� Loihi 鈥� forming there.

鈥淔or now, the main hazards are the lava near the summit and tephra (volcanic ash) that falls like heavy, hot rain sometimes many miles downwind from the eruptive center. Hot poisonous gases, like sulfur dioxide can also pose a significant hazard. The eruption is in a remote, mostly uninhabited area, so that risk to infrastructure and lives is low. However, lava can flow rapidly (few km per hour) and long distances (10s of kilometers) along new or re-activated rift zones and reach population centers, as we saw in 2018.

鈥淲e have been experimenting with the way lava flows over different materials at 黑料不打烊 鈥� clay, sand, wet sand, ice, and snow 鈥� so it will be interesting to see how the lava behaves in this eruption where lava may encounter any of these materials.

鈥淓very eruption is an opportunity to learn about how volcanoes work and how to prepare for the next eruption. Afterall, it is just a question of聽when, not聽if聽the next eruption will occur.鈥�

 

To request interviews or get more information:

Daryl Lovell
Associate Director of Media Relations
Division of Communications

M听315.380.0206
dalovell@syr.edu |
news.syr.edu |

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