Authors
Thomas Aubry, Samantha Engwell, Costanza Bonadonna, Larry Mastin, Guillaume Carazzo, Alexa Van Eaton, David Jessop, Roy Grainger, Simona Scollo, Isabelle Taylor, Mark Jellinek, Anja Schmidt, Sebastien Biass, Mathieu Gouhier
Publication date
2024/3/7
Source
EGU24
Issue
EGU24-10163
Publisher
Copernicus Meetings
Description
Understanding the relationship between the mass eruption rate (MER) and volcanic column height is essential for both real-time volcanic hazard management and reconstruction of past explosive eruptions. Using 134 eruptive events from the new Independent Volcanic Eruption Source Parameter Archive (IVESPA, v1. 0), we constrain bespoke empirical MER-height relationships for four measures of column height: spreading level, sulfur dioxide height, and two measures of top height, from direct observations and as reconstructed from deposits. These relationships show significant differences, and we discuss implications for their applications in ash dispersion forecasting and modelling volcanic climate impacts. The roles of atmospheric stratification, wind, and humidity remain challenging to detect across the wide range of eruptive conditions spanned in IVESPA, ultimately resulting in empirical relationships …