V43B-3139
Magma-tectonic interactions in Kīlauea’s Southwest Rift Zone in 2006 through coupled geodetic/seismological analysis

Thursday, 17 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Christelle Wauthier, Pennsylvania State University Main Campus, Department of Geosciences, University Park, PA, United States, Diana C Roman, Carnegie Institution of Washington, Department of Terrestrial Magnetism, Washington, DC, United States and Michael P Poland, USGS Cascades Volcano Observatory, Vancouver, WA, United States
Abstract:
For much of the first 20 years of Kīlauea’s 1983–present Pu‘u ‘Ō‘ō eruption, deformation was characterized by subsidence at the volcano's summit and along both the East Rift Zone (ERZ) and Southwest Rift Zone (SWRZ). At the end of 2003, however, Kīlauea’s summit began a 4-year period of inflation due to a surge in magma supply to the volcano. In 2006, the SWRZ also experienced atypical inflation, which was last observed in 1981-82 during a series of dike intrusions. To investigate the active magma sources and their interactions with faulting in the SWRZ during 2006, we integrate contemporary geodetic data from InSAR and GPS with double-couple fault-plane solutions for volcano-tectonic earthquakes and Coulomb stress modeling. According to the rate of deformation measured in daily GPS data, two distinct periods can be defined, spanning January to 15 March 2006 (period 1) and 16 March to 30 September 2006 (period 2). Geodetic models suggest that, during period 1, deformation, due to pressurization of magma in a vertical prolate-spheroidal conduit, in the south caldera area. In addition, a major seismic swarm occurred in both the SWRZ and ERZ. Our preliminary results also suggest that, during period 2, magma was still overpressurizing the same prolate-spheroid but a subhorizontal sill also intruded further to the southwest in the seismic SWRZ (SSWRZ). The beginning of period 2 also corresponds to a switch from subsidence to inflation of the SWRZ. Faulting in the upper ERZ is primarily strike-slip, with no obvious change in FPS orientation between periods 1 and 2. In contrast, faulting in the upper SSWRZ occurs as dip-slip motion on near-vertical faults. SSWRZ FPS show a mix of orientations including NW- and NE-striking faults, which along with relative earthquake locations, suggest a series of right-stepping fault segments, particularly during period 2. Calculated Coulomb stress changes indicate that faulting in the upper SSWRZ may result from stresses produced by inflation of the geodetically modeled sources described above, in particular the prolate spheroid located in the south caldera area. In contrast, earthquakes in the ERZ are generally inhibited by the geodetically modeled sources, suggesting that another process may be responsible for faulting along the ERZ.