Publication | Open Access
The collapse of Bárðarbunga caldera, Iceland
59
Citations
34
References
2015
Year
Historical GeographyVolcanologyEngineeringVolcanismAugust 16Active TectonicsActive Rift ZoneEarth ScienceSocial SciencesGeophysicsRegional TectonicsVolcanic ProcessGeodesyNeotectonicsGeographyGeologyCryosphereCollapse BehaviourEngineering GeologyMountain GeologyTectonicsWholesale Caldera CollapseStructural GeologySeismologyLaharBárðarbunga Caldera
Lying below Vatnajökull ice cap in Iceland, Bárðarbunga stratovolcano began experiencing wholesale caldera collapse in 2014 August 16, one of the largest such events recorded in the modern instrumental era. Simultaneous with this collapse is the initiation of a plate boundary rifting episode north of the caldera. Observations using the international constellation of radar satellites indicate rapid 50 cm d−1 subsidence of the glacier surface overlying the collapsing caldera and metre-scale crustal deformation in the active rift zone. Anomalous earthquakes around the rim of the caldera with highly nondouble-couple focal mechanisms provide a mechanical link to the dynamics of the collapsing magma chamber. A model of the collapse consistent with available geodetic and seismic observations suggests that the majority of the observed subsidence occurs aseismically via a deflating sill-like magma chamber.
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