TY - JOUR
T1 - Ice-volcano interaction of the 1996 Gjalp subglacial eruption, Vatnajokull, Iceland
AU - Gudmundsson, Magnús T.
AU - Sigmundsson, Freysteinn
AU - Björnsson, Helgi
PY - 1997
Y1 - 1997
N2 - Volcanic eruptions under glaciers can cause dangerous floods and lahars and create hyaloclastite (fragmented glassy rock) mountains. But processes such as the rate of heat transfer between ice and magma, edifice formation, and the response of the surrounding glacier are poorly understood, because of the lack of data. Here we present observations from the fissure eruption at Vatnajokull ice cap, Iceland, in October 1996. In the 13 days of the eruption 3 km3 of ice were melted and the erupted magma fragmented into glass forming a hyaloclastite ridge 6-7 km long and 200-300m high under 500-750m of ice. Meltwater of temperatures of 15-20°C flowed along a narrow channel at the glacier bed into the Grimsvotn subglacial lake for five weeks, before draining in a sudden flood, or jokulhlaup. Subsidence and crevassing of the ice cap occurred over the eruptive fissure and the meltwater path, whereas elsewhere the glacier surface remained intact suggesting that subglacial eruptions do not trigger widespread basal sliding in warm-based glaciers.
AB - Volcanic eruptions under glaciers can cause dangerous floods and lahars and create hyaloclastite (fragmented glassy rock) mountains. But processes such as the rate of heat transfer between ice and magma, edifice formation, and the response of the surrounding glacier are poorly understood, because of the lack of data. Here we present observations from the fissure eruption at Vatnajokull ice cap, Iceland, in October 1996. In the 13 days of the eruption 3 km3 of ice were melted and the erupted magma fragmented into glass forming a hyaloclastite ridge 6-7 km long and 200-300m high under 500-750m of ice. Meltwater of temperatures of 15-20°C flowed along a narrow channel at the glacier bed into the Grimsvotn subglacial lake for five weeks, before draining in a sudden flood, or jokulhlaup. Subsidence and crevassing of the ice cap occurred over the eruptive fissure and the meltwater path, whereas elsewhere the glacier surface remained intact suggesting that subglacial eruptions do not trigger widespread basal sliding in warm-based glaciers.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/0030657454
U2 - 10.1038/40122
DO - 10.1038/40122
M3 - Article
SN - 0028-0836
VL - 389
SP - 954
EP - 957
JO - Nature
JF - Nature
IS - 6654
ER -