Jökull


Jökull - 01.01.2005, Side 98

Jökull - 01.01.2005, Side 98
Heidi Soosalu and Páll Einarsson sual picking of the events from the continuous low- frequency volcanic tremor. Separate, low-frequency volcanic earthquakes were either not recorded or they were hidden in the tremor. The volcanic tremor Volcanic tremor at Hekla has only been observed dur- ing eruptions. Tremor starts simultaneously with the eruptive activity, thus its appearance in seismograms can be taken as the seismic expression of the onset of the eruption. The vigour of the tremor ceases together with the eruptive activity. On January 17, 1991, continuous low-frequency volcanic tremor started at 17:02 GMT, marking the onset of eruptive activity, thirty minutes after the first observed earthquake (Soosalu et al. 2003). On Febru- ary 26, 2000, the tremor appeared at 18:19, 79 min- utes after the detection of the first earthquake (Soosalu et al. 2005). The simultaneous beginning of the erup- tion was verified by an eyewitness account by radio at the same moment (see Figure 5b). In 1991 the station SAU, 35 km west of Hekla, was the closest digital station to record continuous tremor data at the onset of the eruption. In 2000, in addition to data from SAU, data were also available from the station HAU, 15 km west of Hekla, and from a few other more distant stations. The amplitude of the volcanic tremor at Hekla rises rapidly, within min- utes, and becomes the dominant feature in the seis- mograms, effectively masking the earthquakes. At the onset of the 1991 eruption, the maximum reduced displacement (e.g. McNutt 1994) calculated from the records of the station SAU was about 8 cm2 (Soosalu et al. 2003). Tremor remains most vigorous during the first hour of the eruption, and subsequently declines. The amplitude of the tremor oscillates. Episodes of high- amplitude tremor, lasting from a few seconds to about ten seconds, are separated by moments of lower am- plitude. To follow the development of the vigour of the tremor in a simple manner, we calculated its inten- sity using the procedure presented by Þorbjarnardóttir et al. (1997). The overall behaviour of the tremor dur- ing the first hours of the eruption is shown in a graph expressing its intensity at SAU in 1991 and both SAU and HAU in 2000, together with the observed earth- quakes (Figure 6). In 1991, intensity began to decline sharply about one hour after the onset. This was not observed in 2000. The spectrum of the tremor at the onset of both of the eruptions is remarkably similar. Generally it is observed that volcanic tremor has a peaked spectrum, typically with one dominant and a few subdominant frequency peaks (e.g. Aki et al. 1977; Chouet 1992; Seidl et al. 1981; Ferrick et al. 1982). The Hekla tremor also had this pattern. The characteristic fre- quency band of the tremor is 0.5–1.5 Hz and most of the time one single outstanding peak existed within the frequency band 0.7–0.9 Hz (Figure 8a-b). Occa- sionally there were two or three approximately equal high peaks. A handful of subdominant peaks sporad- ically appeared within the 0.5–1.5 Hz band. The lo- cation of the maximum peak was markedly constant throughout the first hours, for which we have con- tinuous data. The amplitudes of the peaks decrease with time, but the spectral range remains the same. Although the general pattern is similar at various sta- tions, some local spectral differences due to path ef- fects were observed in 2000, with data from several stations. The source of volcanic tremor is often inferred to be shallow, thus the tremor consists mainly of surface waves (e.g. McNutt 1986; Gordeev et al. 1990; Gordeev 1992; Goldstein and Chouet 1994; Ripepe et al. 1996). Our particle motion analysis of the data from the station HAU, both in 1991 and 2000, shows evidence for surface waves, particularly Rayleigh waves, and a shallow source of the tremor (Soosalu et al. 2003, 2005). The Hekla tremor atten- uates faster with distance than the earthquakes, and is indisputably visible at remote digital seismograph stations only at the beginning of the eruption. This also indicates a shallow origin for the tremor, shal- lower than the earthquakes during the first hours of the eruption. The tremor is closely related to degassing, as it first appears when the conduit is open and is most intense in the beginning, when the eruption has a vio- lent, explosive phase. When eruption vigour subsides, the tremor intensity also declines. Occasional tremor- bursts may reflect gas-bursts. 98 JÖKULL No. 55
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