Communications Earth & Environment (Aug 2024)

Submarine cores record magma evolution toward a catastrophic eruption at Kikai Caldera

  • Takeshi Hanyu,
  • Nobukazu Seama,
  • Katsuya Kaneko,
  • Qing Chang,
  • Reina Nakaoka,
  • Koji Kiyosugi,
  • Yuzuru Yamamoto,
  • Tetsuo Matsuno,
  • Keiko Suzuki-Kamata,
  • Yoshiyuki Tatsumi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-024-01591-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Magma evolution toward a caldera-forming eruption remains uncertain in many cases owing to the lack of successive volcanic records before catastrophic eruptions. Here we take an approach to this issue by analyzing a submarine core sampled near Kikai Caldera, southern Japan, which has recorded two caldera-forming eruptions at 95 and 7.3 ka and small eruptions between them. Discovery of mafic glass fragments in the submarine deposits of the 95-ka eruption, which had not been recognized in subaerial outcrops, implies the involvement of mafic magma in felsic magma-driven caldera-forming eruption. Inter-caldera volcanic activity resumed with binary mafic and felsic magma extrusions but then shifted to eruptions predominated by felsic magmas. In the final stage preceding the 7.3-ka caldera-forming eruption, the most felsic composition did not appear in glass fragments. We suggest that this period was the phase of felsic melt accumulation to grow a magma reservoir toward the next catastrophic eruption.