On 27 September 2014 Mount Ontake in central Japan unexpectedly spewed an ash plume 7–10 km into the air and sent a deadly mix of hot gas and rock rushing down the south face of the mountain. The hydrovolcanic eruption, caused when rising magma heated groundwater into explosively expanding steam, killed more than 50 people. An international team of researchers led by Yuji Sano of the University of Tokyo now suggests that a warning sign may have been growing for years. The group had been periodically monitoring ratios of helium-3 to helium-4 in nearby hot springs since 1981. That ratio is a well-known signature of volcanic activity because changes in the relative abundance of 3He, which originates in Earth’s mantle, is often a telltale sign of changing magmatic activity. However, such a signature had never been observed before as a precursor to a hydrovolcanic eruption. At Mount Ontake, the...
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1 October 2015
October 01 2015
A surprise eruption’s decade-long buildup Available to Purchase
Sung Chang
Physics Today 68 (10), 19 (2015);
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Sung Chang; A surprise eruption’s decade-long buildup. Physics Today 1 October 2015; 68 (10): 19. https://doi.org/10.1063/PT.3.2938
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