Scientific Reports (May 2022)

The 2019–2020 volcanic eruption of Late’iki (Metis Shoal), Tonga

  • I. A. Yeo,
  • I. M. McIntosh,
  • S. E. Bryan,
  • K. Tani,
  • M. Dunbabin,
  • D. Metz,
  • P. C. Collins,
  • K. Stone,
  • M. S. Manu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-11133-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Late’iki (previously known as Metis Shoal) is a highly active volcano in the Tofua arc with at least four temporary island-building eruptions and one submarine eruption in the last 55 years. The most recent eruption, commencing in October 2019, resulted in lava effusion and subsequent phreatic explosions, the construction of a short-lived island that was quickly eroded by wave action and possibly further phreatic activity that continued into January 2020. The two-pyroxene dacite from the 2019 eruption is similar to the 1967/8 eruptions suggesting the magma is residual from earlier eruptions and has not undergone further differentiation in the last 50 years. New observations of the 2019 eruption site confirm the lava-dominant character of the volcano summit but a thin veneer of wave-reworked, finely fragmented lava material remains that is interpreted to have been produced by phreatic explosions from hot rock-water interactions during the effusive eruption. A notable absence of quench-fragmented hyaloclastite breccias suggests that non-explosive quench fragmentation processes were minimal at these shallow depths or that hyaloclastite debris has resedimented to greater depths beyond our summit survey area.