Abstract

In December 2018, an unusually large intra- and extra-caldera eruption took place at Ambrym volcano (Vanuatu). The eruption drained the volcano’s five active lava lakes and terminated, at least momentarily, the surface activity that had been ongoing for decades to hundreds of years, sustaining the largest recorded persistent degassing on the planet. Here, we investigate the mechanisms and dynamics of this major eruption. We use major elements and volatiles in olivine and clinopyroxene-hosted melt inclusions, embayments, crystals and matrix glasses together with clinopyroxene geobarometry as well as olivine and clinopyroxene geothermometry and diffusion modelling in crystals and embayments to reconstruct the chronology and timing of the subsurface processes that accompanied the eruption. We find that the eruption began with the meeting, mingling and limited chemical mixing of mostly two magma bodies occupying similar vertical but different horizontal locations in the crust, one corresponding to the main plumbing system at Ambrym that fed the lava lakes and the other corresponding to an older, previously cutoff and more chemically evolved branch of the plumbing system. Within the primitive magma, two texturally distinct components—one microlite rich and one microlite poor—can further be identified. The 2018 eruption hence provides a detailed image of Ambrym’s complex plumbing system. Our diffusion timescales and geobarometric estimates coincide closely with geophysical observations. They point to a reconnection of the evolved magmatic branch with the main system occurring less than 10 h prior to the intra-caldera eruption and a period of 2 days for the subsequent > 30-km lateral magma transport along a deeper dike prior to submarine eruption just off the SE coast of the island with the more primitive magma reaching first followed by mingled magma containing both compositions. Magma ascent rates are estimated at 95 ± 24 m/s in the last ~ 2.5 km of ascent during the intra-caldera eruption and at 80 ± 6 m/s in the last ~ 4 km of ascent during the submarine eruption. Comparison with other lava lake draining eruptions reveals striking similarities both in terms of precursory activity, with lake level rising prior to the eruption in all cases, and in terms of plumbing system organization with the presence of peripheral magma pockets, isolated from the main magmatic system but that can be mobilized and erupted when met by dikes propagating laterally from the main system.

Highlights

  • Lava lakes are the emblem of persistent degassing volcanic activity

  • The presence of four olivine phenocrysts with diffusion profiles indicative of long-term diffusion, as well as frequent oscillatory zoning within the clinopyroxene phenocrysts indicate the possibility of periodic interaction between the silicic and mafic magmatic systems, with at least one interaction occurring more than a year prior to the 2018 eruption

  • While the exact timing of this dike emplacement cannot be resolved by InSAR, we suggest that this dyking event likely put in contact the two previously disconnected branches of the Ambrym plumbing system with primitive magma from the main branch intersecting evolved magma from the eastern branch and rising together to erupt at the surface

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Summary

Introduction

Lava lakes are the emblem of persistent degassing volcanic activity. They are rare examples of volcanic systems having reached a metastable equilibrium whereby gas and magma motions result in conduit dynamics allowing for efficient gas release whilst maintaining molten magma from the chamber to the surface (e.g., Tazieff 1994; Harris et al 2005; Witham and Llewellin2006; Harris 2008; Oppenheimer et al 2009; Burgi et al 2014; Moussallam et al 2015a, 2016; Allard et al 2016b). Lava lakes are the emblem of persistent degassing volcanic activity. They are rare examples of volcanic systems having reached a metastable equilibrium whereby gas and magma motions result in conduit dynamics allowing for efficient gas release whilst maintaining molten magma from the chamber to the surface We present petrological observations of glasses, crystals and melt inclusions of both the initial intra-caldera fire-fountain eruption and subsequent submarine eruption We compare these findings to geophysical and surficial observation to derive a detailed understanding of the cause and timing of the eruption as well as the architecture of Ambrym’s plumbing system

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