TY - JOUR AU - Michael Clare AU - Isobel Yeo AU - Sally Watson AU - Richard Wysoczanski AU - Sarah Seabrook AU - Kevin Mackay AU - James Hunt AU - Emily Lane AU - Peter Talling AU - Edward Pope AU - Shane Cronin AU - Marta o AU - Taaniela Kula AU - David Tappin AU - Stuart Henrys AU - Cornel de Ronde AU - Morelia Urlaub AU - Stefan Kutterolf AU - Samuiela Fonua AU - Semisi Panuve AU - Dean Veverka AU - Ronald Rapp AU - Valey Kamalov AU - Michael Williams AB -
Volcanic eruptions on land create hot and fast pyroclastic density currents, triggering tsunamis or surges that travel over water where they reach the ocean. However, no field study has documented what happens when large volumes of erupted volcanic material are instead delivered directly into the ocean. We show how the rapid emplacement of large volumes of erupted material onto steep submerged slopes triggered extremely fast (122 kilometers per hour) and long-runout (>100 kilometers) seafloor currents. These density currents were faster than those triggered by earthquakes, floods, or storms, and they broke seafloor cables, cutting off a nation from the rest of the world. The deep scours excavated by these currents are similar to those around many submerged volcanoes, providing evidence of large eruptions at other sites worldwide.
BT - Science DA - 2023 Sep 08 DO - 10.1126/science.adi3038 N2 -Volcanic eruptions on land create hot and fast pyroclastic density currents, triggering tsunamis or surges that travel over water where they reach the ocean. However, no field study has documented what happens when large volumes of erupted volcanic material are instead delivered directly into the ocean. We show how the rapid emplacement of large volumes of erupted material onto steep submerged slopes triggered extremely fast (122 kilometers per hour) and long-runout (>100 kilometers) seafloor currents. These density currents were faster than those triggered by earthquakes, floods, or storms, and they broke seafloor cables, cutting off a nation from the rest of the world. The deep scours excavated by these currents are similar to those around many submerged volcanoes, providing evidence of large eruptions at other sites worldwide.
PY - 2023 SP - 1085 EP - 1092 T2 - Science TI - Fast and destructive density currents created by ocean-entering volcanic eruptions. VL - 381 SN - 1095-9203 ER -