Abstract

Volcanic eruptions are, generally, characterized by several recordable signals that can occur before, during and/or after the eruption. Such signals may reflect temporal changes in the seismic structure that can be associated with alterations in the seismic activity, fluid migration or outgassing, useful to track the volcano evolution through its eruptive phases.Cumbre Vieja ridge, in La Palma, is the most active volcanic field in the Canaries. The last eruption occurred at the Tajogaite cone, lasting from 19 September to 13 December 2021. It is considered one of the best-monitored volcanic crises in the Canary Islands, thus allowing us to study the eruption from different scientific perspectives.Ambient seismic noise interferometry has been widely applied to monitor temporal velocity changes, especially at volcanoes before the eruption. However, the causes of these velocity changes are not always fully understood. In this study we use a dataset of three years (2020 to 2022) recorded in two stations operating in La Palma to identify and characterize different physical processes before and after the eruption. For this purpose, we computed phase auto- and cross-correlations and stacked them through the time-frequency phase-weighted stack to create hourly cross-correlation functions.Seismic velocity changes cause phase shifts in the auto- and cross-correlation functions waveforms. The phase shifts can be measured through the waveform similarity, which consists in comparing each correlation function with a reference correlation function trace, in a defined window. The reference trace corresponds to a calm period, in this case, the period before the eruption. We also compared the waveform similarity results with the ground deformation inferred from GPS.Tajogaite eruption provides an opportunity to study the behaviour within the volcanic structure prior to the eruption and its recovery after the eruption and to improve our knowledge of the magmatic fluid migration. This recent and well-documented eruption may serve as a proxy for future eruptions.This work is a contribution to project RESTLESS (PTDC/CTAGEF/6674/2020) and it was also supported by the Portuguese Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT) I.P./MCTES through national funds (PIDDAC) – UIDB/50019/2020-IDL.

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