Scientific Reports (Oct 2022)

Rapid magma ascent beneath La Palma revealed by seismic tomography

  • Luca D’Auria,
  • Ivan Koulakov,
  • Janire Prudencio,
  • Iván Cabrera-Pérez,
  • Jesús M. Ibáñez,
  • Jose Barrancos,
  • Rubén García-Hernández,
  • David Martínez van Dorth,
  • Germán D. Padilla,
  • Monika Przeor,
  • Victor Ortega,
  • Pedro Hernández,
  • Nemesio M. Peréz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-21818-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract For the first time, we obtained high-resolution images of Earth's interior of the La Palma volcanic eruption that occurred in 2021 derived during the eruptive process. We present evidence of a rapid magmatic rise from the base of the oceanic crust under the island to produce an eruption that was active for 85 days. This eruption is interpreted as a very accelerated and energetic process. We used data from 11,349 earthquakes to perform travel-time seismic tomography. We present high-precision earthquake relocations and 3D distributions of P and S-wave velocities highlighting the geometry of magma sources. We identified three distinct structures: (1) a shallow localised region (< 3 km) of hydrothermal alteration; (2) spatially extensive, consolidated, oceanic crust extending to 10 km depth and; (3) a large sub-crustal magma-filled rock volume intrusion extending from 7 to 25 km depth. Our results suggest that this large magma reservoir feeds the La Palma eruption continuously. Prior to eruption onset, magma ascended from 10 km depth to the surface in less than 7 days. In the upper 3 km, melt migration is along the western contact between consolidated oceanic crust and altered hydrothermal material.