Strategic Communications and Marketing News Bureau

Ice-capped volcanoes slower to erupt, study finds

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — The Westdahl Peak volcano in Alaska last erupted in 1992, and continued expansion hints at another eruption soon. Experts previously forecasted the next blast to occur by 2010, but the volcano – located under about 1 kilometer of glacial ice – has yet to erupt again. Using the Westdahl Peak volcano as inspiration, a new volcanic modeling study examined how glaciers affect the stability and short-term eruption cycles of high-latitude volcanic systems – some of which exist along major air transportation routes.

The study, led by University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign undergraduate researcher Lilian Lucas, with graduate student Jack Albright, former graduate student Yan Zhan and geology professor Patricia Gregg, used finite element numerical modeling to study the stability of the rock that surrounds volcanic systems – but with a new twist. The team accounted for the additional pressure from glacial ice volcanoes when forecasting the timing of eruptions.

“Volcanic forecasting involves a lot of variables, including the depth and size of a volcano’s magma chamber, the rate at which magma fills that chamber and the strength of the rocks that contain the chamber, to name a few,” Lucas said. “Accounting for overlying pressure from polar ice caps is another critical, yet poorly understood, variable.”

The Westdahl Peak volcano, located along the Aleutian Island chain in western Alaska, serves as a great model for study because it is well instrumented and continuously monitored by the Alaska Volcano Observatory, the researchers said.

“The Aleutian Islands are fairly remote, but they lie along a major air transportation and trade route connecting North America and East Asia,” Albright said. “Volcanic ash in the atmosphere is hazardous to aircraft engines and can cause major disruptions in air traffic, so more accurate forecasting – even on the scale of months – can provide critical safety information for air traffic and nearby inhabitants.”

To determine how overlying pressure from polar ice can affect the timing of eruptions, the team ran computer simulations of magma reservoirs of different sizes and shapes, the study reported. Researchers varied the flux, or amount of magma that enters the system from below, to determine when the corresponding pressure exceeds the strength of the surrounding rock, which may cause rock failure leading to an eruption.

“We then insert parameters for different thickness of ice into each model scenario and compare how long it takes to reach that point of failure with and without ice,” Albright said.

The study reported that relative to the time it should take for Westdahl Peak to erupt without glacial ice, the presence of ice will increase the stability of the magma system and delay the eruption date by approximately seven years.

“More specifically, the models without the presence of the confining pressure of the ice cap calculated a time to eruption of about 93 years,” Lucas said. “Adding a 1-kilometer-thick ice cap to the model then increases the eruption date to approximately 100 years. Models are not a perfect tool to use in forecasting future eruptions, however, we are mainly interested in the increase in this time as a result of the increased ice load.”

In general, the study results indicated that ice thicknesses of 1 to 3 kilometers can delay ice-covered volcano eruptions for years to decades.

“These increases in time may seem insignificant on a geologic scale, but it is significant on the human time scale,” Gregg said. “Going forward, it will be important to account for glacial ice cover in future forecasting efforts.”

The team acknowledged that previous studies considered how seasonal changes such as annual snow cover might affect the eruption interval of volcanoes. However, when compared with the total overlying load that the magma chamber must overcome to erupt, small seasonal variations are unlikely to play a major role for most systems.

“Seasonal ice loss may impact eruption timing for systems close to failure,” Zhan said. “Furthermore, it will be important to consider how climate change and glacial ice melt might impact Westdahl Peak and other high-latitude volcanoes in the future.”

The results of the study are published in the journal Frontiers in Earth Science. The National Science Foundation, NASA and the University of Illinois Department of Geology Summer Undergraduate Research Opportunity Program supported this study.

Editor’s notes:

To reach Patricia Gregg, call 217-333-3540; email pgregg@illinois.edu

The paper “The impact of ice caps on the mechanical stability of magmatic

systems: Implications for forecasting on human timescales” is available online and is open access. DOI: 10.3389/feart.2022.868569

Read Next

Engineering Portrait of Ying Diao in her University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign lab.

Study finds that tweaked synthetic polymers boost conductivity

A new study marks a significant step forward in positioning synthetic polymers as an alternative for expensive, unsustainable minerals used in the manufacture of devices such as conductors, transistors and diodes.

Announcements Photo of the researcher in a stairwell in a campus building.

Illinoisans to explore their African roots at free event

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Illinois residents of African descent are invited to learn more about their heritage by engaging with the Illinois Family Roots Pilot Program. This community-based project uses DNA testing and genealogical research to help residents discover and reconnect with their African heritage. The IFRPP is one component of The African Kinship Reunion. The […]

Social Sciences Moses Okumu standing outside wearing a blue shirt with green trees in the background.

Many displaced girls in Uganda trapped in cycles of sexual, physical violence

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Nearly 36% of forcibly displaced adolescent girls and young women living in urban informal settlements in Kampala, Uganda, reported that their first sexual experience was nonconsensual — which, for many, marked the beginning of a cycle of sexual and physical violence perpetrated by their intimate partners or other people, a recent study […]

Strategic Communications and Marketing News Bureau

507 E. Green St
MC-426
Champaign, IL 61820

Email: stratcom@illinois.edu

Phone (217) 333-5010