UNEXPECTED RESPONSE OF MT. WRANGELL VOLCANO, ALASKA, TO THE SHAKING FROM A LARGE REGIONAL EARTHQUAKE: A PUZZLE FOR INTERMEDIATE-TERM EARTHQUAKE-VOLCANOES INTERACTIONS

On November 3, 2002 three segments of the Denali fault in interior Alaska ruptured during a Mw 7.9 earthquake, offering a unique opportunity to study earthquake-volcano interactions. Out of the 24 volcanoes that are seismically monitored by the Alaska Volcano Observatory (AVO) only Mt. Wrangell, the...

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Main Authors: Sánchez John J., McNutt Stephen R.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad Nacional de Colombia 2004-06-01
Series:Earth Sciences Research Journal
Online Access:http://www.revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/esrj/article/view/21259
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author Sánchez John J.
McNutt Stephen R.
author_facet Sánchez John J.
McNutt Stephen R.
author_sort Sánchez John J.
collection DOAJ
description On November 3, 2002 three segments of the Denali fault in interior Alaska ruptured during a Mw 7.9 earthquake, offering a unique opportunity to study earthquake-volcano interactions. Out of the 24 volcanoes that are seismically monitored by the Alaska Volcano Observatory (AVO) only Mt. Wrangell, the closest volcano to the epicenter (247 km), showed a clear response to the shaking in the intermediate-term (weeks to months) time scale. The response was unexpected because it consisted of a decline by at least 50% in the volcano's seismicity rate (mostly low-frequency events) that lasted for five months. Because most well documented previous instances of short-term (minutes to days) responses of volcanic centers to the passing waves of distant earthquakes, have all been seismicity increases, the decline in seismicity at Mt. Wrangell poses a controversial puzzle. By using several independent methods to measure the seismicity rate at the volcano from before to after the main shock, and applying rigorous statistical testing, we conclude that the change in seismicity at the volcano was a real effect of the Denali earthquake. We suggest that a depressurization of the volcanic plumbing system took place either as a result of sudden decompression (static stress changes) or because of creation of new pathways resulting from the strong shaking (dynamic stresses). At present we cannot distinguish between these two possibilities.
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spelling doaj-art-e8671bd54eae42289e325a4c4fd89f182025-08-20T03:53:39ZengUniversidad Nacional de ColombiaEarth Sciences Research Journal1794-61902004-06-01813444UNEXPECTED RESPONSE OF MT. WRANGELL VOLCANO, ALASKA, TO THE SHAKING FROM A LARGE REGIONAL EARTHQUAKE: A PUZZLE FOR INTERMEDIATE-TERM EARTHQUAKE-VOLCANOES INTERACTIONSSánchez John J.McNutt Stephen R.On November 3, 2002 three segments of the Denali fault in interior Alaska ruptured during a Mw 7.9 earthquake, offering a unique opportunity to study earthquake-volcano interactions. Out of the 24 volcanoes that are seismically monitored by the Alaska Volcano Observatory (AVO) only Mt. Wrangell, the closest volcano to the epicenter (247 km), showed a clear response to the shaking in the intermediate-term (weeks to months) time scale. The response was unexpected because it consisted of a decline by at least 50% in the volcano's seismicity rate (mostly low-frequency events) that lasted for five months. Because most well documented previous instances of short-term (minutes to days) responses of volcanic centers to the passing waves of distant earthquakes, have all been seismicity increases, the decline in seismicity at Mt. Wrangell poses a controversial puzzle. By using several independent methods to measure the seismicity rate at the volcano from before to after the main shock, and applying rigorous statistical testing, we conclude that the change in seismicity at the volcano was a real effect of the Denali earthquake. We suggest that a depressurization of the volcanic plumbing system took place either as a result of sudden decompression (static stress changes) or because of creation of new pathways resulting from the strong shaking (dynamic stresses). At present we cannot distinguish between these two possibilities.http://www.revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/esrj/article/view/21259
spellingShingle Sánchez John J.
McNutt Stephen R.
UNEXPECTED RESPONSE OF MT. WRANGELL VOLCANO, ALASKA, TO THE SHAKING FROM A LARGE REGIONAL EARTHQUAKE: A PUZZLE FOR INTERMEDIATE-TERM EARTHQUAKE-VOLCANOES INTERACTIONS
Earth Sciences Research Journal
title UNEXPECTED RESPONSE OF MT. WRANGELL VOLCANO, ALASKA, TO THE SHAKING FROM A LARGE REGIONAL EARTHQUAKE: A PUZZLE FOR INTERMEDIATE-TERM EARTHQUAKE-VOLCANOES INTERACTIONS
title_full UNEXPECTED RESPONSE OF MT. WRANGELL VOLCANO, ALASKA, TO THE SHAKING FROM A LARGE REGIONAL EARTHQUAKE: A PUZZLE FOR INTERMEDIATE-TERM EARTHQUAKE-VOLCANOES INTERACTIONS
title_fullStr UNEXPECTED RESPONSE OF MT. WRANGELL VOLCANO, ALASKA, TO THE SHAKING FROM A LARGE REGIONAL EARTHQUAKE: A PUZZLE FOR INTERMEDIATE-TERM EARTHQUAKE-VOLCANOES INTERACTIONS
title_full_unstemmed UNEXPECTED RESPONSE OF MT. WRANGELL VOLCANO, ALASKA, TO THE SHAKING FROM A LARGE REGIONAL EARTHQUAKE: A PUZZLE FOR INTERMEDIATE-TERM EARTHQUAKE-VOLCANOES INTERACTIONS
title_short UNEXPECTED RESPONSE OF MT. WRANGELL VOLCANO, ALASKA, TO THE SHAKING FROM A LARGE REGIONAL EARTHQUAKE: A PUZZLE FOR INTERMEDIATE-TERM EARTHQUAKE-VOLCANOES INTERACTIONS
title_sort unexpected response of mt wrangell volcano alaska to the shaking from a large regional earthquake a puzzle for intermediate term earthquake volcanoes interactions
url http://www.revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/esrj/article/view/21259
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AT mcnuttstephenr unexpectedresponseofmtwrangellvolcanoalaskatotheshakingfromalargeregionalearthquakeapuzzleforintermediatetermearthquakevolcanoesinteractions