Water, ice and mud: Lahars and lahar hazards at ice- and snow-clad volcanoes

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Abstract

Large-volume lahars are significant hazards at ice and snow covered volcanoes. Hot eruptive products produced during explosive eruptions can generate a substantial volume of melt water that quickly evolves into highly mobile flows of ice, sediment and water. At present it is difficult to predict the size of lahars that can form at ice and snow covered volcanoes due to their complex flow character and behaviour. However, advances in experiments and numerical approaches are producing new conceptual models and new methods for hazard assessment. Eruption triggered lahars that are ice-dominated leave behind thin, almost unrecognizable sedimentary deposits, making them likely to be under-represented in the geological record. © 2014 John Wiley & Sons Ltd, The Geologists' Association & The Geological Society of London.

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Waythomas, C. F. (2014). Water, ice and mud: Lahars and lahar hazards at ice- and snow-clad volcanoes. Geology Today, 30(1), 34–39. https://doi.org/10.1111/gto.12035

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