V43A-4860:
Recent and Hazardous Volcanic Activity Along the NW Rift Zone of Piton De La Fournaise Volcano, La Réunion Island

Thursday, 18 December 2014
Georg Walther, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, Munich, Germany, Ingmar Frese, Albert Ludwig University of Freiburg, Earth and Environmental Sciences, Freiberg, Germany, Andrea Di Muro, IPGP, Observatoire Volcanologique du Piton de la Fournaise, Bourg Murat, France, Ulrich Kueppers, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, Earth & Environmental Sciences, Munich, Germany, Laurent Michon, Université de la Réunion, UFR Sciences et Technologies, Saint Denis, Reunion and Nicole Metrich, Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris, Paris, France
Abstract:
Shield volcanoes are a common feature of basaltic volcanism. Their volcanic activity is often confined to a summit crater area and rift systems, both characterized by constructive (scoria and cinder cones; lava flows) and destructive (pit craters; caldera collapse) phenomena. Piton de la Fournaise (PdF) shield volcano (La Réunion Island, Indian Ocean) is an ideal place to study these differences in eruptive behaviour. Besides the frequent eruptions in the central Enclos Fouqué caldera, hundreds of eruptive vents opened along three main rift zones cutting the edifice during the last 50 kyrs. Two short rift zones are characterized by weak seismicity and lateral magma transport at shallow depth (above sea level). Here we focus on the third and largest rift zone (15km wide, 20 km long), which extends in a north-westerly direction between PdF and nearby Piton des Neiges volcanic complex. It is typified by deep seismicity (up to 30 km), emitting mostly primitive magmas, testifying of high fluid pressures (up to 5 kbar) and large-volume eruptions. We present new field data (including stratigraphic logs, a geological map of the area, C-14 dating and geochemical analyses of the eruption products) on one of the youngest (~6kyrs) and largest lava field (Trous Blancs eruption). It extends for 24km from a height of 1800 m asl, passing Le Tampon and Saint Pierre cities, until reaching the coast. The source area of this huge lava flow has been identified in an alignment of four previously unidentified pit craters. The eruption initiated with intense fountaining activity, producing a m-thick bed of loose black scoria, which becomes densely welded in its upper part; followed by an alternation of volume rich lava effusions and strombolian activity, resulting in the emplacement of meter-thick, massive units of olivine-basalt alternating with coarse scoria beds in the proximal area. Activity ended with the emplacement of a dm-thick bed of glassy, dense scoria and a stratified lithic breccia, marking the pit crater foundering. Interestingly, this final stage compares well with the formation of pit craters on Kilauea volcano, Hawaii. Reoccurring of similar activity on the NW rift represents a major source of risk, for this now densely populated region (more than 150,000 people living in the affected area).