Title of article :
The significance of slab-crusted lava flows for understanding controls on flow emplacement at Mount Etna, Sicily
Author/Authors :
Guest، نويسنده , , John E. and Stofan، نويسنده , , Ellen R.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages :
13
From page :
193
To page :
205
Abstract :
Slab-crusted flows on Mount Etna, Sicily are defined here as those whose crust has ridden on the flow core without significant disruption or deformation and have a high length to width ratio. They typically erupt from ephemeral boccas as late-stage products on dominantly aa flow fields, such as that of the 1983 eruption on Mount Etna. Slab-crusted flows tend to inflate mainly as they approach and after they reach the maximum length of slab-crust formation, the flow interior acting as a preferential pathway for injecting lava under a stable crust. Coalescence of vesicles under successive crusts causes separation between core and crust giving a new cooling surface within the flow, on which ropy surfaces (and occasionally aa textures) of limited areal extent may develop. Slab-crusted flows tend to form at ephemeral boccas together with other surface textural types including toes, ropy pahoehoe sheets and aa flows. This suggests that, on Etna, slab-crusted flows form from lava of the same rheological properties as both aa and pahoehoe textured flows. They do not represent a transition between aa and pahoehoe as argued for toothpaste flows in Hawaii. We conclude that slab-crusted flows on Etna owe their morphology to a relatively high critical ratio of effusion rate to advance rate, related to vent cross-sectional area and the slope over which the flow forms.
Keywords :
lava flow emplacement , lava inflation , lava morphology , slab-crusted lava , Mount Etna , toothpaste lava
Journal title :
Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research
Serial Year :
2005
Journal title :
Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research
Record number :
2244346
Link To Document :
بازگشت