The 2008–2010 Subsidence of Dallol Volcano on the Spreading Erta Ale Ridge: InSAR Observations and Source Models

In this work, we study the subsidence of Dallol, an explosive crater and hydrothermal area along the spreading Erta Ale ridge of Afar (Ethiopia). No volcanic products exist at the surface. However, a diking episode in 2004, accompanied by dike-induced faulting, indicates that Dallol is an active vol...

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Main Authors: Maurizio Battaglia, Carolina Pagli, Stefano Meuti
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-05-01
Series:Remote Sensing
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/13/10/1991
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spelling doaj-65c1f868f0f1413180a963591d633a4b2021-06-01T00:31:05ZengMDPI AGRemote Sensing2072-42922021-05-01131991199110.3390/rs13101991The 2008–2010 Subsidence of Dallol Volcano on the Spreading Erta Ale Ridge: InSAR Observations and Source ModelsMaurizio Battaglia0Carolina Pagli1Stefano Meuti2Department of Earth Sciences, Sapienza University of Rome, 00185 Rome, ItalyDepartment of Earth Sciences, University of Pisa, 56126 Pisa, ItalyDepartment of Earth Sciences, Sapienza University of Rome, 00185 Rome, ItalyIn this work, we study the subsidence of Dallol, an explosive crater and hydrothermal area along the spreading Erta Ale ridge of Afar (Ethiopia). No volcanic products exist at the surface. However, a diking episode in 2004, accompanied by dike-induced faulting, indicates that Dallol is an active volcanic area. The 2004 diking episode was followed by quiescence until subsidence started in 2008. We use InSAR to measure the deformation, and inverse, thermoelastic and poroelastic modelling to understand the possible causes of the subsidence. Analysis of InSAR data from 2004–2010 shows that subsidence, centered at Dallol, initiated in October 2008, and continued at least until February 2010 at an approximately regular rate of up to 10 cm/year. The inversion of InSAR average velocities finds that the source causing the subsidence is shallow (depth between 0.5 and 1.5 km), located under Dallol and with a volume decrease between −0.63 and −0.26 × 10<sup>6</sup> km<sup>3</sup>/year. The most likely explanation for the subsidence of Dallol volcano is a combination of outgassing (depressurization), cooling and contraction of the roof of a shallow crustal magma chamber or of the hydrothermal system.https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/13/10/1991volcano deformationinterferometric synthetic aperture radarground deformation modellingvolcano geodesyDallol volcano
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maurizio Battaglia
Carolina Pagli
Stefano Meuti
spellingShingle Maurizio Battaglia
Carolina Pagli
Stefano Meuti
The 2008–2010 Subsidence of Dallol Volcano on the Spreading Erta Ale Ridge: InSAR Observations and Source Models
Remote Sensing
volcano deformation
interferometric synthetic aperture radar
ground deformation modelling
volcano geodesy
Dallol volcano
author_facet Maurizio Battaglia
Carolina Pagli
Stefano Meuti
author_sort Maurizio Battaglia
title The 2008–2010 Subsidence of Dallol Volcano on the Spreading Erta Ale Ridge: InSAR Observations and Source Models
title_short The 2008–2010 Subsidence of Dallol Volcano on the Spreading Erta Ale Ridge: InSAR Observations and Source Models
title_full The 2008–2010 Subsidence of Dallol Volcano on the Spreading Erta Ale Ridge: InSAR Observations and Source Models
title_fullStr The 2008–2010 Subsidence of Dallol Volcano on the Spreading Erta Ale Ridge: InSAR Observations and Source Models
title_full_unstemmed The 2008–2010 Subsidence of Dallol Volcano on the Spreading Erta Ale Ridge: InSAR Observations and Source Models
title_sort 2008–2010 subsidence of dallol volcano on the spreading erta ale ridge: insar observations and source models
publisher MDPI AG
series Remote Sensing
issn 2072-4292
publishDate 2021-05-01
description In this work, we study the subsidence of Dallol, an explosive crater and hydrothermal area along the spreading Erta Ale ridge of Afar (Ethiopia). No volcanic products exist at the surface. However, a diking episode in 2004, accompanied by dike-induced faulting, indicates that Dallol is an active volcanic area. The 2004 diking episode was followed by quiescence until subsidence started in 2008. We use InSAR to measure the deformation, and inverse, thermoelastic and poroelastic modelling to understand the possible causes of the subsidence. Analysis of InSAR data from 2004–2010 shows that subsidence, centered at Dallol, initiated in October 2008, and continued at least until February 2010 at an approximately regular rate of up to 10 cm/year. The inversion of InSAR average velocities finds that the source causing the subsidence is shallow (depth between 0.5 and 1.5 km), located under Dallol and with a volume decrease between −0.63 and −0.26 × 10<sup>6</sup> km<sup>3</sup>/year. The most likely explanation for the subsidence of Dallol volcano is a combination of outgassing (depressurization), cooling and contraction of the roof of a shallow crustal magma chamber or of the hydrothermal system.
topic volcano deformation
interferometric synthetic aperture radar
ground deformation modelling
volcano geodesy
Dallol volcano
url https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/13/10/1991
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