Earth, Planets and Space (Mar 2023)
Shallow resistivity structure around the 2018 craters of Mt. Motoshirane of Kusatsu-Shirane Volcano, Japan, revealed by audio-frequency magnetotellurics
Abstract
Abstract In 2018, a phreatic eruption occurred at Mt. Motoshirane, a pyroclastic cone group of the Kusatsu-Shirane Volcano in central Japan. The eruption was abrupt, and no signs of volcanic activity have been observed in recent years, in contrast to the other major pyroclastic cone group, Mt. Shirane, which hosts the active crater lake and has endured repeated phreatic eruptions. To understand the mechanism of the eruption at Mt. Motoshirane, information on the shallow hydrothermal system, which is thought to be the source region of phreatic eruptions, is required; however, few studies have been conducted on this particular cone group. In this study, we conducted an audio-frequency magnetotelluric survey in 2020 to reveal the shallow resistivity structure around the 2018 craters. A three-dimensional resistivity structure model showed generally two layers, with high resistivities at shallow depths overlain by low resistivities underneath. The boundary between the layers corresponded to the top boundary of the Neogene basement rocks. These low resistivities were not found beneath the 2018 craters; therefore, part of the Neogene basement rocks could have been lost by the eruption beneath the 2018 craters. This is consistent with the geochemical study on the mineral assemblage of the erupted deposits, which suggested that the explosions reached the depth of the basement. Graphical Abstract
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