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For John. Earthquakes And Volcanic Eruptions |
Hi John. Thanks for the tip about contacting Michael Manga at UCB. I did a little background work on him and found a interesting paper put out by him and others. Again thanks a bunch. Take Care…Don in creepy town Approximately 0.4% of explosive volcanic eruptions occur within a few days of large, distant earthquakes. This many “triggered” eruptions is much greater than expected by chance. Several mechanisms have been proposed to explain triggering through changes in magma overpressure, including the growth of bubbles, the advection of large pressures by rising bubbles, and overturn of magma chambers. Alternatively, triggered eruptions may occur through failure of rocks surrounding stored magma. All these mechanisms require a process that enhances small static stress changes caused by earthquakes or that can convert (the larger) transient, dynamic strains into permanent changes in pressure. All proposed processes, in addition to Viscoelastic relaxation of stresses, can result in delayed triggering of eruptions, though quantifying the connection between earthquakes and delayed, triggered eruptions is much more challenging. Mud volcanoes and geysers also respond to distant earthquakes. Mud volcanoes, that Follow Ups: ● triggering - John Vidale 20:32:07 - 7/27/2005 (27370) (1) ● Colima Eruption - Don in Hollister 22:14:01 - 7/27/2005 (27372) (1) ● can't buy that - John Vidale 22:21:09 - 7/27/2005 (27373) (1) ● Don't Be To Quick - Don in Hollister 22:33:50 - 7/27/2005 (27374) (2) ● Re: Don't Be To Quick - chris in suburbia 03:04:38 - 7/30/2005 (27384) (0) ● are you talking about P waves? - John Vidale 23:34:48 - 7/27/2005 (27375) (0) |
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