Deep Ash Plumes Signal Ongoing or Recent Submarine Volcanic Eruptions,
and Demonstrate a Syn-eruptive Process for Dispersing Fine Ash to Distal
Sediments.
Abstract
The considerable challenges of accessing unpredictable events at remote
seafloor locations make submarine eruptions difficult to study in real
time. The serendipitous discovery of two persistently active sites (NW
Rota-1 in the Mariana arc, at ~550 m, and West Mata in
the NE Lau basin at ~1200 m) resulted in multi-year,
multi-parameter studies that included water column plume surveys and
direct (ROV) observations. Intense magmatic-hydrothermal plumes rose
buoyantly above both sites, while deep particle plume layers, dominated
by fine ash and devoid of hydrothermal tracers, were found dispersing
laterally on isopycnal surfaces at variable depths below the eruptive
vents and above the seafloor. The presence or absence of deep ash plumes
was directly correlated with explosive activity or quiescence,
respectively. An estimated 0.4-14.6 x 105 m3/yr of fine ash entered the
water column surrounding these volcanoes and remained suspended at
distances exceeding 10’s of km. We show that deep ash plume layers in
the water column are a common feature of explosive submarine eruptions
at other sites as well, and that they demonstrate a syn-eruptive mode of
transport for fine ash that will result in deposition as “hidden”
cryptotephra or fallout deposits in marine sediments at distances
greater than previously predicted. Cruise FK171110 extended the time
series of observations at West Mata, and resulted in discovery of new
lava flows emplaced after September 2012, with one constrained between
March 2016 and November 2017. ROV dives confirmed that West Mata was
quiescent during this expedition, but widespread deep ash plumes were
present. Turbidity in the deep ash plumes decreased by 80% over a
25-day period, with an average loss of 3% (0.15-0.6 g/m2) per day,
suggesting the eruption that formed the 2016-2017 eruptive deposits had
occurred within 8-121 days prior to the FK171110 expedition. Future
studies of submarine volcanic processes will depend on improved
exploration and event detection capabilities. In addition to recognizing
the characteristic hydrothermal event plumes rising into the water
column above actively erupting sites, widespread ash plumes dispersing
at depths deeper than eruptive vents can also be diagnostic of ongoing,
or very recent, eruptions. We infer the eruptive status at other sites
based on these criteria.