Volcanic activity produces deformation and gravity changes that many times can be used as precursor of future eruptions. Applying geodetic techniques to monitoring activity involves interpretation using deformation models. Usually gravity change data and displacement data are interpreted separately. We show, using modeling of deformation and gravity change in Long Valley Caldera. California, USA, that this can lead to incorrect interpretations The results obtained show that displacements and gravity changes must be interpreted together whenever possible and that elastic-gravitational models can be a far more appropriate approximation to problems of volcanic load in the crust than the more commonly used purely elastic models. Therefore it is necessary to change the philosophy normally used to interpret geodetic observations, improving the possibility of predicting future eruptions.
CITATION STYLE
Fernández, J., Charco, M., Tiampo, K. F., Jentzsch, G., & Rundle, J. B. (2001). Joint interpretation of displacement and gravity data in volcanic areas. A test example: Long Valley Caldera, California. Geophysical Research Letters, 28(6), 1063–1066. https://doi.org/10.1029/2000GL012393
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