Tyatya Volcano, southwestern Kuril arc: Recent eruptive activity inferred from widespread tephra

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dc.contributor.author Nakagawa Mitsuhiro
dc.contributor.author Ishizuka Yoshihiro
dc.contributor.author Kudo Takashi
dc.contributor.author Yoshimoto Mitsuhiro
dc.contributor.author Hirose Wataru
dc.contributor.author Ishizaki Yoshio
dc.contributor.author Gouchi Nobuo
dc.contributor.author Katsui Yoshio
dc.contributor.author Solovyow Alexander W.
dc.contributor.author Steinberg Genrikh S.
dc.contributor.author Abdurakhmanov Arslan I.
dc.date.accessioned 2019-09-03T12:29:58Z
dc.date.available 2019-09-03T12:29:58Z
dc.date.issued 2002
dc.identifier http://repo.kscnet.ru/3322/
dc.identifier http://doi.org/10.1046/j.1440-1738.2002.00368.x
dc.identifier.citation Nakagawa Mitsuhiro, Ishizuka Yoshihiro, Kudo Takashi, Yoshimoto Mitsuhiro, Hirose Wataru, Ishizaki Yoshio, Gouchi Nobuo, Katsui Yoshio, Solovyow Alexander W., Steinberg Genrikh S., Abdurakhmanov Arslan I. (2002) Tyatya Volcano, southwestern Kuril arc: Recent eruptive activity inferred from widespread tephra // The Island Arc. Vol. 11, No. 4. pp. 236-254. doi: 10.1046/j.1440-1738.2002.00368.x.
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/6056
dc.description.abstract Tyatya Volcano, situated in Kunashir Island at the southwestern end of Kuril Islands, is a large composite stratovolcano and one of the most active volcanoes in the Kuril arc. The volcanic edifice can be divided into the old and the young ones, which are composed of rocks of distinct magma types, low‐ and medium‐K series, respectively. The young volcano has a summit caldera with a central cone. Recent eruptions have occurred at the central cone and at the flank vents of the young volcano. We found several distal ash layers at the volcano and identified their ages and sources, that is, tephras of ad 1856, ad 1739, ad 1694 and ca 1 Ka derived from three volcanoes of Hokkaido, Japan, and caad 969 from Baitoushan Volcano of China/North Korea. These could provide good time markers to reveal the eruptive history of the central cone, which had continued intermittently with Strombolian eruptions and lava flow effusions since before 1 Ka. Relatively explosive eruptions have occurred three times at the cone during the past 1000 years. We revealed that, topographically, the youngest lava flows from the cone are covered not by the tephra of ad 1739 but by that of ad 1856. This evidence, together with a report of dense smoke rising from the summit in ad 1812, suggests that the latest major eruption with lava effusion from the central cone occurred in this year. In 1973, after a long period of dormancy, short‐lived phreatomagmatic eruptions began to occur from fissure vents at the northern flank of the young volcano. This was followed by large eruptions of Strombolian to sub‐Plinian types occurring from several craters at the southern flank. The 1973 activity is evaluated as Volcanic Explosivity Index = 4 (approximately 0.2 km3), the largest eruption during the 20th century in the southwestern Kuril arc. The rocks of the central cone are strongly porphyritic basalt and basaltic andesite, whereas the 1973 scoria is aphyric basalt, suggesting that magma feeding systems are definitely different between the summit and flank eruptions.
dc.language.iso en
dc.subject 38.37.25 Вулканология
dc.subject Тятя
dc.title Tyatya Volcano, southwestern Kuril arc: Recent eruptive activity inferred from widespread tephra
dc.type Статья
dc.identifier.doi 10.1046/j.1440-1738.2002.00368.x


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