Time-window into the transcrustal plumbing system dynamics of Dominica (Lesser Antilles)

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Abstract

Dominica, one of the most magmatically active islands of the Lesser Antilles through its four active volcanoes, is likely host under its central part, below Morne Trois Pitons–Micotrin, to a well-established transcrustal mush system. Pre-eruptive spatiotemporal magma dynamics are examined for five, explosive, pumiceous eruptions of this volcano in the last 24 kyrs through a combined Crystal System Analysis and intracrystalline Fe–Mg interdiffusion timescales modelling approaches. Before all eruptions, two magmatic environments of close compositions have interacted. These interactions began ~ 10–30 years prior to the four smaller of these eruptions, with more sustained mixing in the last decade, accelerated in the last 2 years. This contrasts with the largest pumiceous eruption, involving deeper magmas, with magma interaction starting over roughly a century but with various patterns. This suggests a possibility that increasing reactivation signals could be registered at the surface some years before future eruptions, having significant implications for volcanic risk mitigation.

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Ostorero, L., Boudon, G., Balcone-Boissard, H., Morgan, D. J., d’Augustin, T., & Solaro, C. (2021). Time-window into the transcrustal plumbing system dynamics of Dominica (Lesser Antilles). Scientific Reports, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-90831-1

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