Magma storage in a strike-slip caldera

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Abstract

Silicic calderas form during explosive volcanic eruptions when magma withdrawal triggers collapse along bounding faults. The nature of specific interactions between magmatism and tectonism in caldera-forming systems is, however, unclear. Regional stress patterns may control the location and geometry of magma reservoirs, which in turn may control the spatial and temporal development of faults. Here we provide new insight into strike-slip volcano-tectonic relations by analysing Bouguer gravity data from Ilopango caldera, El Salvador, which has a long history of catastrophic explosive eruptions. The observed low gravity beneath the caldera is aligned along the principal horizontal stress orientations of the El Salvador Fault Zone. Data inversion shows that the causative low-density structure extends to ca. 6 km depth, which we interpret as a shallow plumbing system comprising a fractured hydrothermal reservoir overlying a magmatic reservoir with ≳ 3 vol% exsolved vapour. Fault-controlled localization of magma constrains potential vent locations for future eruptions.

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APA

Saxby, J., Gottsmann, J., Cashman, K., & Gutierrez, E. (2016). Magma storage in a strike-slip caldera. Nature Communications, 7. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms12295

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