AV短视频

2021

The silent build-up to a super-eruption

Geologists from the UNIGE and Peking AV短视频 have developed a technique that makes it possible to estimate the maximum size of a future super-eruption of Toba volcano in Sumatra.

page_garde_Caricchi.jpg

Photo of Lake Toba in Sumatra and its island created by the accumulation of magma in the volcano鈥檚 magma reservoir.听漏 UNIGE

It is estimated that about 5-10 volcanoes worldwide are capable of producing a super-eruption that could catastrophically affect global climate. One of these volcanoes hides below the waters of Lake Toba in Sumatra and has caused two super-eruptions in the last one million year. But when will the next one be? Will there be any warning signs? To answer these questions, an international team of geologists led from the AV短视频 (UNIGE), Switzerland, and Peking AV短视频, China, developed an analysis of the levels of uranium and lead in zircons 鈥 a mineral typically found in explosive volcanic eruptions 鈥 to determine how long it took the volcano to prepare for its super-eruptions. Unfortunately, these results, published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), refute the notion that unusual geological signs would herald an imminent super-eruption. Instead, the magma silently accumulated in the magma reservoir until these massive explosions occur.

The Toba volcano in Sumatra caused two of the largest eruptions known on the Earth: the first 840,000 years ago, the second 75,000 years ago, each measuring about 2鈥800 km3, enough to blanket the whole of Switzerland with 7 cm thick of ash, and representing 70,000 times the amount of magma erupted to this moment by the ongoing La Palma eruption. Two other smaller eruptions took place, one 1.4 million years ago and the other 500,000 years ago.

Geologists from UNIGE and Peking AV短视频 are interested in the Toba volcano because there is no historical record of human response to a super-eruption of the size that it produced in the past. Such an event would affect the global climate and pose numerous problems, particularly in terms of food supply, not to mention the migration of populations. 鈥淭oba volcano forms a caldera, meaning that previous eruptions have created a large depression that is occupied today by meteoric water鈥, explains Luca Caricchi, professor at the Department of Earth Sciences at the UNIGE Faculty of Science and co-author of the study. At the centre of the lake is an island that raised from the water because of the push of the magma injected in the subvolcanic reservoir. 鈥淲e can see that this island is gradually increasing in height, indicating that the volcano is active and that magma is accumulating underneath鈥, says Ping-Ping Liu, a professor at the Faculty of Earth and Space Sciences of Peking AV短视频 and leading author of the article. But are we close to the next super-eruption?


Measuring uranium and lead in zircon

Zircon is a mineral that is found in the products of explosive volcanic eruptions. 鈥淥ne of its characteristics is that it takes uranium within its structure鈥, explains Ping-Ping Liu. Over time, the uranium decays into lead. 鈥淪o by measuring the amount of uranium and lead in zircon with a mass spectrometer, we can determine its age鈥, says the geologist. The scientists determined the age of a large number of zircons extracted from the products of different eruptions: the youngest zircon provides information on the date of the eruption and the older zircons reveal the history of magma accumulation preceding the super-eruptions.听

鈥淭he first super-eruption occurred around 840,000 years ago after 1.4 million years of magma input, whereas magma fed the second super-eruption at 75,000 years accumulated only in 600,000 years鈥, notes Luca Caricchi. Why was the time of magma accumulation halved even if the two super-eruptions were of the same size? 鈥淭his is linked to the progressive increase of the temperature of the continental crust in which Toba鈥檚 magma reservoir is assembled鈥, explains Ping-Ping Liu. The input of magma has gradually heated the surrounding continental crust, which makes the magma cool slower. 鈥淭his is a 鈥榲icious circle鈥 of eruptions: the more the magma heats the crust, the slower the magma cools and the faster the rate of magma accumulation becomes鈥, she says. The result is that super-eruptions can become more frequent in time.


Estimating the rate of magma accumulation to anticipate the size of the next super-eruption

This technique, based on zircon geochronology, can also be used to estimate the rate of magma input in a magma reservoir. 鈥淭oday, we estimate that about 320 km3 of magma could be ready to erupt within the reservoir of Toba volcano鈥, says Luca Caricchi. If such an eruption would occur now, this would be a very catastrophic event that strongly affect not only the highly populated island of Sumatra but also the global environment. Geologists have estimated that currently about 4 km3 of eruptible magma is accumulating within Toba鈥檚 magma reservoir every thousand years and that this rate was rather stable throughout its eruptive history. 鈥淭he next super-eruption of the size of the last two would therefore take place in about 600,000 years鈥, he continues. This does not rule out that smaller eruptions could occur in the meantime.

This innovative method can be applied to any other volcano globally and could serve to identify which volcano is closest to a super-eruption. 鈥淭his is a great advance, because with few super-eruptions in the last 2 million years, it is not possible for us to obtain statistically significant values for the frequency of these catastrophic events at a global scale鈥, explains Ping-Ping Liu. 鈥淥ur study also shows that no extreme events occur before a super-eruption. This suggests that signs of an impending super-eruption such as a significant increase in earthquakes or rapid ground uplift, might not be as obvious as pictured in disaster movies by the film industry. At Toba volcano, everything is happening silently underground, and the analysis of the zircons now gives us an idea of what is to come鈥, concludes Luca Caricchi.

1 Nov 2021

2021

Our experts

Talk to specialists from all disciplines

Discover and download UNIGE images

Archives

All our press releases since 2012

media(at)unige.ch

Université de Genève

24 rue Général-Dufour

CH-1211 Genève 4

T. +41 22 379 77 96

F. +41 22 379 77 29