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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham :Springer International Publishing AG,
    Keywords: Volcanic eruptions. ; Volcanic hazard analysis. ; Electronic books.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (581 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9783031150401
    Series Statement: Active Volcanoes of the World Series
    DDC: 551.210959827
    Language: English
    Note: Intro -- Opening Letter: The Long Shadow of Merapi Volcano -- References -- Foreword -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- 1 The Scientific Discovery of Merapi: From Ancient Javanese Sources to the 21st Century -- Abstract -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 Merapi in Early Javanese Sources -- 1.3 The Naturalists of the 18th and 19th Century -- 1.4 Observations of Merapi and Its Eruptions in the Late 19th and Early 20th Century -- 1.5 Into the Modern Era: Merapi Research After Indonesia's Independence -- 1.6 The United Nations International Decade for Natural Disaster Reduction and Merapi Decade Volcano -- 1.7 Research in the 21st Century -- 1.8 Volcano Monitoring at Merapi-A 100 Year History -- Acknowledgements -- References -- 2 Physical Environment and Human Context at Merapi Volcano: A Complex Balance Between Accessing Livelihoods and Coping with Volcanic Hazards -- Abstract -- 2.1 Introduction: Merapi, a Highly Populated Volcano -- 2.2 The Main Reason of High Population Densities: Land Resources and Associated Livelihoods at Merapi -- 2.2.1 A Climatic Context Suitable for Livelihoods -- 2.2.2 Land Use, Agriculture and Livestock -- 2.2.3 Block and Sand Mining in the Valleys: An Adaptation to Pyroclastic Density Currents and Lahars? -- 2.3 Capacities to Face High-Frequency/Low-Magnitude Eruptions at Merapi -- 2.3.1 Volcanic Risk Management -- 2.3.2 Crisis Management -- 2.3.2.1 Official and Traditional Warning Systems -- 2.3.2.2 Organising the Evacuations: The Importance of Road Networks and Transportation Capacity -- 2.4 Crisis Management and Peoples' Responses During the 2010 Low-Frequency/High-Magnitude Eruption -- 2.4.1 Crisis Management by the Authorities -- 2.4.1.1 Evacuation Orders and Restricted Zones -- 2.4.1.2 Crisis Management Related to Air Traffic -- 2.4.2 Peoples' Response During the 2010 Eruption Crisis -- 2.4.2.1 Shelter Attendance. , 2.4.2.2 Population Behaviour During the 2010 Eruption Crisis -- 2.5 Post-Disaster Resilience and Adaptation at Merapi -- 2.5.1 The Choice of Relocation -- 2.5.2 Daily Challenges and Evolution of the Quality of Life -- 2.6 Summary and Outlook -- Acknowledgements -- References -- 3 Merapi and Its Dynamic 'Disaster Culture' -- Abstract -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 The Role of the Past in the Present and Future of Merapi -- 3.2.1 Misunderstandings of Past Intersections of Culture and Nature at Merapi -- 3.2.2 The Colonial View of the Archaeological Site of Borobudur and Its Relationship to Merapi -- 3.2.3 The Non-Colonial View of Franz Wilhelm Junghuhn on Merapi -- 3.3 The Social Life of Merapi -- 3.3.1 A 'Disaster Culture' -- 3.4 The Scientific Vision of Merapi -- 3.4.1 Modern Scientific Study of Merapi -- 3.4.2 Collecting and Disseminating Data and Interpretations in the Twenty-First Century -- 3.5 The Nature and Culture of Merapi in the Anthropocene -- 3.5.1 Oral Traditions and Participatory Hazards Communication as a Bridge to Scientific Communication -- 3.5.2 The Sacred Axis as Pre-Modern Observation -- 3.6 Engagement with Dynamic Pasts and Futures -- Acknowledgements -- References -- 4 The Geodynamic Setting and Geological Context of Merapi Volcano in Central Java, Indonesia -- Abstract -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Geodynamic Setting -- 4.3 Geological Structure of Mt. Merapi -- 4.4 Regional Stratigraphy of East-Central Java -- 4.4.1 Basement Rocks of East-Central Java -- 4.4.2 The Rembang Zone -- 4.4.3 The Randublatung Zone -- 4.4.4 The Kendeng Zone -- 4.4.5 The Central Java Depression (Solo Zone) -- 4.4.6 The Southern Mountains of East-Central Java -- 4.5 Summary -- Acknowledgements -- References -- 5 Crustal Structure and Ascent of Fluids and Melts Beneath Merapi: Insights From Geophysical Investigations -- Abstract -- 5.1 Introduction. , 5.2 GPS, Tilt and Gravity Measurements -- 5.3 Electrical Resistivity Structure -- 5.4 Active Seismic Measurements Explain Complex Earthquake Signals of a Stratovolcano -- 5.5 Merapi's Magma Reservoir and Ascent Paths of Fluids and Partial Melts -- 5.5.1 Deeper Structure Beneath Central Java -- 5.5.2 Shallower Structure Beneath Merapi -- 5.6 Summary -- Acknowledgements -- References -- 6 Geological History, Chronology and Magmatic Evolution of Merapi -- Abstract -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Geological Evolution of Merapi -- 6.2.1 Previous Research and the Development of Ideas -- 6.2.1.1 Early Work -- 6.2.1.2 Research from 1980 to 2000 -- 6.2.1.3 Research in the Twenty-First Century -- 6.2.2 A Synthesis of the Geological History and Chronology of Merapi: Current Thinking -- 6.2.2.1 Volcano-Stratigraphic Units -- 6.2.2.2 Structural Evolution and Volcano Collapse -- 6.3 Compositional Variations of the Eruptive Products of Merapi -- 6.3.1 Rock Types and Classification -- 6.3.2 Mineralogy and Petrography -- 6.3.2.1 Mineralogical and Petrographical Characteristics -- 6.3.2.2 Mineral Textures and Compositions -- 6.3.3 Major and Trace Element Compositions -- 6.3.4 Isotopic Compositions -- 6.3.4.1 Radiogenic Isotopes -- 6.3.4.2 Oxygen Isotopes -- 6.3.4.3 Uranium Series Isotopes -- 6.4 Magma Genesis and Magmatic Differentiation at Merapi -- 6.4.1 Magma Generation -- 6.4.2 Magma Storage Conditions and Magmatic Differentiation -- 6.4.3 Magmatic Evolution of Merapi: Temporal Geochemical Variations -- 6.5 Summary -- Acknowledgements -- References -- 7 The Godean Debris Avalanche Deposit From a Sector Collapse of Merapi Volcano -- Abstract -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 Geological Setting and Previous Studies -- 7.3 Ancient Lake Borobudur -- 7.4 Ancient Lake Gantiwarno -- 7.5 Geology of the Godean Area -- 7.5.1 Godean Palaeovolcano -- 7.5.2 Godean Debris Avalanche Deposit. , 7.5.3 Pyroclastic Deposits -- 7.5.4 Lahar Deposits -- 7.6 Significance of the Tertiary Volcanic Rocks -- 7.7 Emplacement, Area Covered and Volume of the Godean Debris Avalanche Deposit -- 7.8 Merapi Sector Collapse(s) and the Relation to Old Merapi and New Merapi -- 7.9 Ages of Merapi Sector Collapse(s) and the Godean Debris Avalanche -- 7.10 Future Hazards -- 7.11 Summary and Outlook -- Acknowledgements -- References -- 8 The Magma Plumbing System of Merapi: The Petrological Perspective -- Abstract -- 8.1 Introduction -- 8.2 Geological Background -- 8.3 Petrology of Merapi Lavas and Inclusions -- 8.3.1 The Basaltic-Andesite Lavas -- 8.3.2 Highly-Crystalline Basaltic-Andesite Schlieren and Domains -- 8.3.3 Co-magmatic Basaltic Enclaves -- 8.3.4 Plutonic Crystalline Inclusions -- 8.3.5 Amphibole Megacrysts -- 8.3.6 Metasedimentary Calc-Silicate Inclusions (Crustal Xenoliths) -- 8.4 A View into the Magma Plumbing System of Merapi -- 8.4.1 Evidence from Thermobarometry -- 8.4.2 Evidence from Phase-Equilibrium Experiments -- 8.4.3 Rare Earth Element Concentrations and Patterns -- 8.4.4 Radiogenic Isotopes -- 8.4.5 Oxygen and Deuterium Isotopes -- 8.4.6 Constraints from Geophysics and Thermobarometry Approaches -- 8.5 Magma Storage and Origin of Inclusions and Xenolith Types -- 8.6 An Integrated Model for Merapi's Plumbing System -- 8.7 Magma Storage Along the Java-Bali Segment of the Sunda Arc -- 8.8 Summary and Outlook -- Acknowledgements -- References -- 9 A Textural Perspective on the Magmatic System and Eruptive Behaviour of Merapi Volcano -- Abstract -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 Background -- 9.2.1 Eruptive Styles of Merapi -- 9.2.2 Merapi Magmatic System -- 9.2.3 Crystallisation: Nucleation, Growth and Equilibrium Effects -- 9.2.4 Crystal Size Distribution (CSD) Analysis. , 9.3 The Crustal Plumbing System and Magmatic Processes Revealed Through Textural Analysis -- 9.3.1 Coarse Plutonic Inclusions and the Deep Plumbing System -- 9.3.2 Phenocrysts: Crustal Magma Storage System and Its Evolution Through Time -- 9.4 Shallow Conduit Processes Revealed Through Textural Analyses -- 9.4.1 Amphibole Reaction Rims -- 9.4.2 Feldspar Groundmass Microlite Textures -- 9.4.2.1 Feldspar Microlite Textures in Effusive Dome-Forming Eruptions -- 9.4.2.2 Effusive-Explosive Transitions at Merapi: Textural Evidence -- 9.5 Summary and Outlook -- Acknowledgements -- References -- 10 Magma-Carbonate Interaction at Merapi Volcano, Indonesia -- Abstract -- 10.1 Introduction -- 10.2 A Brief History of Research on Magma-Carbonate Interaction -- 10.3 Geological Context of Merapi -- 10.4 Mineralogy of Merapi Calc-Silicate Xenoliths -- 10.5 Geochemical Evidence of Magma-Carbonate Interaction -- 10.5.1 Strontium Isotopes -- 10.5.2 Oxygen Isotopes -- 10.5.3 Carbon and Helium Isotopes -- 10.5.4 A Major Element Conundrum? -- 10.6 Experimental Magma-Carbonate Interaction at Merapi -- 10.6.1 Volatile Degassing -- 10.6.2 Calcium-Contamination -- 10.7 The Volatile Budget at Merapi -- Acknowledgements -- References -- 11 Merapi Volcano: From Volcanic Gases to Magma Degassing -- Abstract -- 11.1 Introduction -- 11.2 Early Analyses of Merapi Volcanic Gases -- 11.2.1 Major Gas Chemistry -- 11.2.2 Stable Isotope Tracing -- 11.2.3 Trace Elements -- 11.3 Routine Survey of Merapi Volcanic Gases -- 11.3.1 Gas Composition -- 11.3.2 Sulphur Dioxide Emission Rate -- 11.4 Degassing of Resident Magma in Shallow Feeding System -- 11.5 Merapi Hydrothermal System -- 11.6 Magma-Limestone Interaction and CO2 Degassing -- 11.7 Volcanic Gas Composition and Eruptive Activity -- 11.7.1 Pre-eruptive Gas Changes and Eruption Style -- 11.7.2 Dome Growth and Gas Composition. , 11.7.3 Volcanic Activity and Trace Metals in Gases.
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  • 2
    In: Geology, Melville, NY : American Institute of Physics, 1973, 37(2009), 12, Seite 1099-1102, 1943-2682
    In: volume:37
    In: year:2009
    In: number:12
    In: pages:1099-1102
    Description / Table of Contents: The growth of large volcanoes is commonly interrupted by episodes of flank collapse that may be accompanied by catastrophic debris avalanches, explosive eruptions, and tsunamis. El Hierro, the youngest island of the Canary Archipelago, has been repeatedly affected by such mass-wasting events in the last 1 Ma. Our field observations and petrological data suggest that the largest and most recent of these flank collapses -the El Golfo landslide -likely influenced the magma plumbing system of the island, leading to the eruption of higher proportions of denser and less evolved magmas. The results of our numerical simulations indicate that the El Golfo landslide generated pressure changes exceeding 1 MPa down to upper-mantle depths, with local amplification in the surroundings and within the modeled magma plumbing system. Stress perturbations of that order might drastically alter feeding system processes, such as degassing, transport, differentiation, and mixing of magma batches.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: graph. Darst
    ISSN: 1943-2682
    Language: English
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  • 3
    In: Bulletin of volcanology, Berlin : Springer, 1986, 67(2005), Seite 457-468, 0258-8900
    In: volume:67
    In: year:2005
    In: pages:457-468
    Type of Medium: Article
    ISSN: 0258-8900
    Language: English
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  • 4
    Keywords: Earth sciences. ; Geochemistry. ; Natural disasters. ; Geographic information systems. ; Human geography. ; Java ; Vulkan ; Vulkanismus ; Vulkangebiet ; Erdbeben ; Eruption ; Gunung Merapi ; Geologie ; Seismologie ; Vulkan ; Seismologie ; Überwachung
    Description / Table of Contents: The Scientific Discovery of Merapi: From Ancient Javanese Sources to the 21st Century -- Physical Environment and Human Context at Merapi Volcano: A Complex Balance Between Accessing Livelihoods and Coping With Volcanic Hazards -- Merapi and Its Dynamic 'Disaster Culture' -- The Geodynamic Setting and Geological Context of Merapi Volcano in Central Java, Indonesia -- Crustal Structure and Ascent of Fluids and Melts Beneath Merapi: Insights From Geophysical Investigations -- Geological History, Chronology and Magmatic Evolution of Merapi -- The Godean Debris Avalanche Deposit From a Sector Collapse of Merapi Volcano.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource(XIX, 572 p. 245 illus., 229 illus. in color.)
    Edition: 1st ed. 2023.
    ISBN: 9783031150401
    Series Statement: Active Volcanoes of the World
    Language: English
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Volcanic inflation and deflation often precede eruptions and can lead to seismic velocity changes (dv/v $dv/v$) in the subsurface. Recently, interferometry on the coda of ambient noise‐cross‐correlation functions yielded encouraging results in detecting these changes at active volcanoes. Here, we analyze seismic data recorded at the Klyuchevskoy Volcanic Group in Kamchatka, Russia, between summer of 2015 and summer of 2016 to study signals related to volcanic activity. However, ubiquitous volcanic tremors introduce distortions in the noise wavefield that cause artifacts in the dv/v $dv/v$ estimates masking the impact of physical mechanisms. To avoid such instabilities, we propose a new technique called time‐segmented passive image interferometry. In this technique, we employ a hierarchical clustering algorithm to find periods in which the wavefield can be considered stationary. For these periods, we perform separate noise interferometry studies. To further increase the temporal resolution of our results, we use an AI‐driven approach to find stations with similar dv/v $dv/v$ responses and apply a spatial stack. The impacts of snow load and precipitation dominate the resulting dv/v $dv/v$ time series, as we demonstrate with the help of a simple model. In February 2016, we observe an abrupt velocity drop due to the M7.2 Zhupanov earthquake. Shortly after, we register a gradual velocity increase of about 0.3% at Bezymianny Volcano coinciding with surface deformation observed using remote sensing techniques. We suggest that the inflation of a shallow reservoir related to the beginning of Bezymianny's 2016/2017 eruptive cycle could have caused this local velocity increase and a decorrelation of the correlation function coda.
    Description: Plain Language Summary: Before eruptions, volcanoes inflate due to the rising magma from below. Previous studies have found that these deformations can lead to small changes in the properties of the surrounding rock. We use passive image interferometry, a method that relies on the omnipresent background vibration of the Earth—mostly induced by the oceans, to measure these changes at the Klyuchevskoy Volcanic Group in Kamchatka, Russia. However, in Kamchatka, this background noise is masked and distorted by small earthquakes and tremors originating from the volcanoes themselves. We combine machine learning techniques with established monitoring methods to find times when these tremors remain similar. Afterward, we use data from these time periods in the conventional way to observe changes in the soil and the rock. Our results show that rain‐ and snowfall and the thickness of the snow cover exert the strongest influence on the properties of the rocks. Additionally, we found that a large magnitude 7.2 earthquake, which struck Kamchatka during our study, caused a slight weakening of the rocks due to microstructural damage. We register changes shortly before an eruption and suggest a connection to the beginning of an eruptive cycle in 2016.
    Description: Key Points: Fluctuating noise conditions lead to distortions in noise interferometry studies, which we avoid with the help of machine learning. The seismic velocity on Kamchatka is affected by numerous mechanisms, amongst them environmental, tectonic, and volcanic events. We observe a velocity increase at Bezymianny during February 2016 and link it to the beginning of the eruptive cycle.
    Description: German Research Foundation
    Description: https://doi.org/10.14470/K47560642124
    Description: https://doi.org/10.24381/cds.e2161bac
    Description: https://doi.org/10.5880/GFZ.2.4.2022.002
    Description: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7481934
    Keywords: ddc:551 ; seismology ; volcano monitoring ; machine learning ; ambient noise ; seismic velocity change ; time varying earth structure
    Language: English
    Type: doc-type:article
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: Large-scale, catastrophic mass wasting is a major process contributing to the dismantling of oceanic intraplate volcanoes. Recent studies, however, have highlighted a possible feedback relationship between flank collapse, or incipient instability, and subsequent episodes of structural rearrangement and/or renewed volcano growth. The Teno massif, located in northwestern Tenerife (Canary Islands), is a deeply eroded Miocene shield volcano that was built in four major eruptive phases punctuated by two lateral collapses, each removing 〉20–25 km3 of the volcano's north flank. In this paper, we use detailed field observations and petrological and geochemical data to evaluate possible links between large-scale landslides and subsequent volcanism/magmatism during Teno's evolution. Inspection of key stratigraphic sequences reveals that steep angular unconformities, relics of paleolandslide scars, are marked by polymict breccias. Near their base, these deposits typically include abundant juvenile pyroclastic material, otherwise scarce in the region. While some of Teno's most evolved, low-density magmas were produced just before flank collapses, early postlandslide lava sequences are characterized by anomalously high proportions of dense ankaramite flows, extremely rich in clinopyroxene and olivine crystals. A detailed sampling profile shows transitions from low-Mg # lavas relatively rich in SiO2 to lavas with low silica content and comparatively high Mg # after both landslides. Long-term variations in Zr/Nb, normative nepheline, and La/Lu are coupled but do not show a systematic correlation with stratigraphic boundaries. We propose that whereas loading of the growing precollapse volcano promoted magma stagnation and differentiation, the successive giant landslides modified the shallow volcano-tectonic stress field at Teno, resulting in widespread pyroclastic eruptions and shallow magma reservoir drainage. This rapid unloading of several tens of km3 of near-surface rocks appears to have upset magma differentiation processes, while facilitating the remobilization and tapping of denser ankaramite magmas that were stored in the uppermost mantle. Degrees of mantle melting coincidently reached a maximum in the short time interval between the two landslides and declined shortly after, probably reflecting intrinsic plume processes rather than a collapse-induced influence on mantle melting. Our study of Teno volcano bears implications for other oceanic volcanoes where short-term compositional variations may also directly relate to major flank collapse events.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: In their article, Geyer and Martí (2010) propose that the evolution and origin of the volcanic islands which constitute the Canarian archipelago are strongly controlled by regional tectonic “Atlantic” and “African” structures. In their Fig. 1a they sketch the geometry of the Iberian and Moroccan microplates and the respective boundary zones with respect to Africa (Nubia) and Eurasia (Mantovani et al., 2007). Dashed lines indicating presumed plate boundaries cross the Canarian archipelago, which will therefore be located along a lithospheric fracture, the boundary between the Moroccan and African (Nubia) microplates. This regional fracture extends from the Atlas to the Atlantis fracture zone, coinciding in parts with the propagating fracture postulated by Anguita and Hernán (1975). In Fig. 1b of Geyer and Martí (2010), dashed lines indicate the orientation of the most evident tectonic structures visible on the ocean floor. As we show in this comment, all of these mapped “faults” are artifacts.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 8
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    GSA, Geological Society of America
    In:  Geology, 37 (12). pp. 1199-1102.
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: The growth of large volcanoes is commonly interrupted by episodes of flank collapse that may be accompanied by catastrophic debris avalanches, explosive eruptions, and tsunamis. El Hierro, the youngest island of the Canary Archipelago, has been repeatedly affected by such mass-wasting events in the last 1 Ma. Our field observations and petrological data suggest that the largest and most recent of these flank collapses—the El Golfo landslide—likely influenced the magma plumbing system of the island, leading to the eruption of higher proportions of denser and less evolved magmas. The results of our numerical simulations indicate that the El Golfo landslide generated pressure changes exceeding 1 MPa down to upper-mantle depths, with local amplification in the surroundings and within the modeled magma plumbing system. Stress perturbations of that order might drastically alter feeding system processes, such as degassing, transport, differentiation, and mixing of magma batches.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: Large volcanic edifices are often shaped by the coalescence of adjacent volcanoes as well as intrusive rift zones and gravitational spreading. To better understand the structure of such volcanoes we designed analogue experiments simulating gravitational spreading of an edifice made by overlapping cones of different age, and examined the formation of rift zones. The results allow distinction of two main rift geometries. (i) Spreading edifices of similar age that partly overlap, tend to develop a rift zone approximately perpendicular to the boundary of both volcanoes. Such a rift zone causes two volcanoes to grow together and form an elongated topographic ridge. (ii) Partly overlapping volcanoes of different age are spreading at different rates and thus form a rift zone parallel to the boundary of both volcanoes. Such a rift zone causes two volcanoes to structurally separate. The results are widely applicable for large volcanoes subject to rifting and flank spreading, which we demonstrate for Réunion Island and for southern Hawaii.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2018-05-29
    Description: The relationship between rift zones and flank instability in ocean island volcanoes is often inferred but rarely documented. Our field data, aerial image analysis, and 40Ar/39Ar chronology from Anaga basaltic shield volcano on Tenerife, Canary Islands, support a rift zone—flank instability relationship. A single rift zone dominated the early stage of the Anaga edifice (~6–4.5 Ma). Destabilization of the northern sector led to partial seaward collapse at about ~4.5 Ma, resulting in a giant landslide. The remnant highly fractured northern flank is part of the destabilized sector. A curved rift zone developed within and around this unstable sector between 4.5 and 3.5 Ma. Induced by the dilatation of the curved rift, a further rift-arm developed to the south, generating a three-armed rift system. This evolutionary sequence is supported by elastic dislocation models that illustrate how a curved rift zone accelerates flank instability on one side of a rift, and facilitates dike intrusions on the opposite side. Our study demonstrates a feedback relationship between flank instability and intrusive development, a scenario probably common in ocean island volcanoes. We therefore propose that ocean island rift zones represent geologically unsteady structures that migrate and reorganize in response to volcano flank instability.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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