Author:
Colombier M.,Ukstins I. A.,Tegtmeier S.,Scheu B.,Cronin S. J.,Thivet S.,Paredes-Mariño J.,Cimarelli C.,Hess K.-U.,Kula Taaniela,Latu’ila Folauhola H.,Dingwell D. B.
Abstract
AbstractThe 15 January 2022 submarine eruption at Hunga volcano was the most explosive volcanic eruption in 140 years. It involved exceptional magma and seawater interaction throughout the entire submarine caldera collapse. The submarine volcanic jet breached the sea surface and formed a subaerial eruptive plume that transported volcanic ash, gas, sea salts and seawater up to ~ 57 km, reaching into the mesosphere. We document high concentrations of sea salts in tephra (volcanic ash) collected shortly after deposition. We also discuss the potential climatic consequences of large-scale injection of salts into the upper atmosphere during submarine eruptions. Sodium chloride in these volcanic plumes can reach extreme concentrations, and dehalogenation of chlorides and bromides poses the risk of long-term atmospheric and weather impact. Salt content in rapidly collected tephra samples may also be used as a proxy to estimate the water:magma ratio during eruption, with implications for quantification of fragmentation efficiency in submarine breaching events. The balance between salt loading into the atmosphere versus deposition in ash aggregates is a key factor in understanding the atmospheric and climatic consequences of submarine eruptions.
Funder
European Research Council
University of Auckland FRDF
School of Environment DRDF
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
3 articles.
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