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Sedimentology and geomorphology of the deposits from the August 2006 pyroclastic density currents at Tungurahua volcano, Ecuador

The deposits of the pyroclastic density currents from the August 2006 eruption of Tungurahua show three facies associations depending on the topographic setting: the massive, proximal cross-stratified, and distal cross-stratified facies. (1) The massive facies is confined to valleys on the slopes of...

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Autores principales: Douillet, Guilhem Amin, Tsang-Hin-Sun, Ève, Kueppers, Ulrich, Letort, Jean, Pacheco, Daniel Alejandro, Goldstein, Fabian, Von Aulock, Felix, Lavallée, Yan, Hanson, Jonathan Bruce, Bustillos, Jorge, Robin, Claude, Ramón, Patricio, Hall, Minard, Dingwell, Donald B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer Berlin Heidelberg 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4456066/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26069386
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00445-013-0765-7
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author Douillet, Guilhem Amin
Tsang-Hin-Sun, Ève
Kueppers, Ulrich
Letort, Jean
Pacheco, Daniel Alejandro
Goldstein, Fabian
Von Aulock, Felix
Lavallée, Yan
Hanson, Jonathan Bruce
Bustillos, Jorge
Robin, Claude
Ramón, Patricio
Hall, Minard
Dingwell, Donald B.
author_facet Douillet, Guilhem Amin
Tsang-Hin-Sun, Ève
Kueppers, Ulrich
Letort, Jean
Pacheco, Daniel Alejandro
Goldstein, Fabian
Von Aulock, Felix
Lavallée, Yan
Hanson, Jonathan Bruce
Bustillos, Jorge
Robin, Claude
Ramón, Patricio
Hall, Minard
Dingwell, Donald B.
author_sort Douillet, Guilhem Amin
collection PubMed
description The deposits of the pyroclastic density currents from the August 2006 eruption of Tungurahua show three facies associations depending on the topographic setting: the massive, proximal cross-stratified, and distal cross-stratified facies. (1) The massive facies is confined to valleys on the slopes of the volcano. It contains clasts of >1 m diameter to fine ash material, is massive, and interpreted as deposited from dense pyroclastic flows. Its surface can exhibit lobes and levees covered with disk-shaped and vesicular large clasts. These fragile large clasts must have rafted at the surface of the flows all along the path in order to be preserved, and thus imply a sharp density boundary near the surface of these flows. (2) The proximal cross-stratified facies is exposed on valley overbanks on the upper part of the volcano and contains both massive coarse-grained layers and cross-stratified ash and lapilli bedsets. It is interpreted as deposited from (a) dense pyroclastic flows that overflowed the gentle ridges of valleys of the upper part of the volcano and (b) dilute pyroclastic density currents created from the dense flows by the entrainment of air on the steep upper flanks. (3) The distal cross-stratified facies outcrops as spatially limited, isolated, and wedge-shaped bodies of cross-stratified ash deposits located downstream of cliffs on valleys overbanks. It contains numerous aggrading dune bedforms, whose crest orientations reveal parental flow directions. A downstream decrease in the size of the dune bedforms, together with a downstream fining trend in the grain size distribution are observed on a 100-m scale. This facies is interpreted to have been deposited from dilute pyroclastic density currents with basal tractional boundary layers. We suggest that the parental flows were produced from the dense flows by entrainment of air at cliffs, and that these diluted currents might rapidly deposit through “pneumatic jumps”. Three modes are present in the grain size distribution of all samples independently of the facies, which further supports the interpretation that all three facies derive from the same initial flows. This study emphasizes the influence of topography on small volume pyroclastic density currents, and the importance of flow transformation and flow-stripping processes.
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spelling pubmed-44560662015-06-09 Sedimentology and geomorphology of the deposits from the August 2006 pyroclastic density currents at Tungurahua volcano, Ecuador Douillet, Guilhem Amin Tsang-Hin-Sun, Ève Kueppers, Ulrich Letort, Jean Pacheco, Daniel Alejandro Goldstein, Fabian Von Aulock, Felix Lavallée, Yan Hanson, Jonathan Bruce Bustillos, Jorge Robin, Claude Ramón, Patricio Hall, Minard Dingwell, Donald B. Bull Volcanol Research Article The deposits of the pyroclastic density currents from the August 2006 eruption of Tungurahua show three facies associations depending on the topographic setting: the massive, proximal cross-stratified, and distal cross-stratified facies. (1) The massive facies is confined to valleys on the slopes of the volcano. It contains clasts of >1 m diameter to fine ash material, is massive, and interpreted as deposited from dense pyroclastic flows. Its surface can exhibit lobes and levees covered with disk-shaped and vesicular large clasts. These fragile large clasts must have rafted at the surface of the flows all along the path in order to be preserved, and thus imply a sharp density boundary near the surface of these flows. (2) The proximal cross-stratified facies is exposed on valley overbanks on the upper part of the volcano and contains both massive coarse-grained layers and cross-stratified ash and lapilli bedsets. It is interpreted as deposited from (a) dense pyroclastic flows that overflowed the gentle ridges of valleys of the upper part of the volcano and (b) dilute pyroclastic density currents created from the dense flows by the entrainment of air on the steep upper flanks. (3) The distal cross-stratified facies outcrops as spatially limited, isolated, and wedge-shaped bodies of cross-stratified ash deposits located downstream of cliffs on valleys overbanks. It contains numerous aggrading dune bedforms, whose crest orientations reveal parental flow directions. A downstream decrease in the size of the dune bedforms, together with a downstream fining trend in the grain size distribution are observed on a 100-m scale. This facies is interpreted to have been deposited from dilute pyroclastic density currents with basal tractional boundary layers. We suggest that the parental flows were produced from the dense flows by entrainment of air at cliffs, and that these diluted currents might rapidly deposit through “pneumatic jumps”. Three modes are present in the grain size distribution of all samples independently of the facies, which further supports the interpretation that all three facies derive from the same initial flows. This study emphasizes the influence of topography on small volume pyroclastic density currents, and the importance of flow transformation and flow-stripping processes. Springer Berlin Heidelberg 2013-10-24 2013 /pmc/articles/PMC4456066/ /pubmed/26069386 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00445-013-0765-7 Text en © The Author(s) 2013 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/ Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits any use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and the source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Douillet, Guilhem Amin
Tsang-Hin-Sun, Ève
Kueppers, Ulrich
Letort, Jean
Pacheco, Daniel Alejandro
Goldstein, Fabian
Von Aulock, Felix
Lavallée, Yan
Hanson, Jonathan Bruce
Bustillos, Jorge
Robin, Claude
Ramón, Patricio
Hall, Minard
Dingwell, Donald B.
Sedimentology and geomorphology of the deposits from the August 2006 pyroclastic density currents at Tungurahua volcano, Ecuador
title Sedimentology and geomorphology of the deposits from the August 2006 pyroclastic density currents at Tungurahua volcano, Ecuador
title_full Sedimentology and geomorphology of the deposits from the August 2006 pyroclastic density currents at Tungurahua volcano, Ecuador
title_fullStr Sedimentology and geomorphology of the deposits from the August 2006 pyroclastic density currents at Tungurahua volcano, Ecuador
title_full_unstemmed Sedimentology and geomorphology of the deposits from the August 2006 pyroclastic density currents at Tungurahua volcano, Ecuador
title_short Sedimentology and geomorphology of the deposits from the August 2006 pyroclastic density currents at Tungurahua volcano, Ecuador
title_sort sedimentology and geomorphology of the deposits from the august 2006 pyroclastic density currents at tungurahua volcano, ecuador
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4456066/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26069386
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00445-013-0765-7
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