Wednesday, October 9

La Palma volcano: what are the next days expected to be like?

This Monday we observed that the La Palma volcano had had a stop in its eruptive activity, in which it stopped emitting lava. However, this can change again at any time.

In fact, within a few minutes of this happening, we were again observing an eruptive column of water vapor and many black pyroclasts. Thus we corroborate that the evolution of the activity of the volcano, whose lava has already reached the ocean, is highly changing over time.

Will there be new explosions?

To understand the eruption process of a volcano we can compare it with a bottle of champagne . When the bottle is closed we do not see the gas. In the same way, when magma is stagnant about ten or fifteen kilometers deep, it is a silicate liquid substance and hot to more than 1. 200 degrees with dissolved gases or volatiles (water and various compounds of carbon, sulfur, chlorine, fluorine, among others), plus crystals.

That is, as with the bottle, there is gas but at this time you could not see it. This happens in the magmatic chamber below the island of La Palma, where there is sufficient lithostatic pressure and no bubbles are formed (magmatic vesiculation).

But when that lava rises to subsurface areas (a few kilometers or hundreds of meters), the magma begins to release gas (exsolution of bubbles). Then we find a magma composed of a 95% liquid and 5% gases, approximately, enclosed in the bubbles. These volatiles are the ones that will generate the explosiveness that we see on the surface .

As the magma rises, the bubbles they are getting bigger and breaking near the surface. Thus the fragmentation of the magma takes place, which goes outside forming a column of pyroclasts (ash, lapilli, slag and bombs, depending on their size from smallest to largest). These are dispersed according to their density: the coarsest near the fissure and the finest to the troposphere and kilometer distances.

The superficial eruptive fissure can measure hundreds of meters or a few kilometers and changes to the long of the time. Several mouths can be formed, but now it has been concentrated in a main volcanic cone. In this week that we have been erupting, that cone already has between 160 and 180 meters high.

Una botella de champán cerrada y otra descorchada
The eruption process can be compared to a bottle of champagne, before and after being uncorked.

We will surely experience new explosions . There will be pulses, that is, we will have several hours of continuous, highly explosive eruption. Therefore, in a matter of minutes the explosiveness can decrease and stop, and then release an explosive eruptive column again after a short time.

The explosive pulses, like the ones we have been seeing throughout of these eight days, are conditioned by the amount of dissolved gas that exists in the magma that rises to the surface at temperatures of about 1. 200 degrees.

Lava falls

We cannot know how much the rash will last. The only thing we can do is study the historical volcanic facts. In this context, since the conquest of the Canary Islands, on the rift or rift There have been six eruptions of Cumbre Vieja.

The one in Teneguía, the shortest, lasted 25 days, that of San Juan 38 days, that of El Charco 56 days, that of Tahuya 84 days, among others. That is, they have all lasted between one and three months.

As far as we know, the magmatic chamber that exists in the insular subsoil may have several hundred million cubic meters and so far they have been emitted some 43 millions of them. That is, there is still a lot of material down and we only have a week, so we can foresee that there is still a lot of eruption with explosive pulses and some calmer ones.

We also did not know if it would reach the sea. On Sunday the lava was at 1. 300 meters from the coastline, with a very powerful wash that varied between 5 and 20 meters high (more or less like a building between 2 to 7 floors) and a front of 600 meters long. His speed was 100 meters per hour but it changes over time, as it depends on the slope of the terrain and the geoforms.

With these data, we expected it to reach the sea in thirteen hours (that is, Monday), but in the morning there was no liquid magma coming out, so the forecasts changed and it did not reach the Tue until midnight on Tuesday.

In any case, it is irrelevant whether it reaches the sea or not in relation to its evolution. Although, unfortunately, its arrival may mean the end of the banana trees, buildings and infrastructures .

In this coastal area you will find cliffs of several dozen meters and some beaches. Lava falls down the cliffs and lava cascades and coastal lava platforms form, as happened in other historical eruptions on this island. For example, in the Teneguía in 1971, that of San Juan in 1949, that of El Charco in 1712, Fuencaliente in 1677 or that of Tahuya of 1585.

Un trabajador de una platanera en La Palma carga un racimo de plátanos antes de la erupción del volcán
The island’s banana trees are in danger of being destroyed by the eruption.

Where will the lava go?

Also , the path of the lava can change . Continuing again with the historical comparisons, the Teneguía eruption began with an eruptive mouth, as has happened now, with several small emission centers.

Then it was concentrated in a volcanic cone, as happens in the new volcano. In the end, several conical buildings were formed with scattering pyroclasts and several lava flows that occupied a remarkable surface area. Thus the perimeter of the island increased at that point.

But that cone broke and the blocks detached they went down the slope with the lava flow (erratic blocks). As the days passed, other fissures were created, more strombolian volcanic cones and several lava flows that lay on top of each other or that dispersed laterally, along with the pyroclastic deposits of fall in the surroundings.

This is what could happen in the next few days in the current eruption: new lavas will form, one on top of the other, or new lateral flows , but they will always seek to run from the areas of higher topographic elevation to the areas of lower height. Magmatic liquids move by gravity and following the topography of the terrain, looking for ravines or steeper areas.

Las cascadas de lava derramadas por el volcán de La Palma llegan hasta el océano Atlántico
This Tuesday, the waterfalls of lava spilled by the La Palma volcano reached the Atlantic Ocean.

The future of the eruptions in the Canary Islands

The Canary Islands hot spot may have a diameter of about 250 kilometres. This distance encompasses the volcanic island buildings of El Hierro, La Palma and Tenerife. That is why there have been historical and recent eruptions that are concentrated in these three islands. But we cannot predict in which one the next eruption will occur.

Going back to previous eruptions In these islands, we can estimate that as we live an event like the current one every 35 or 43 years approximately. But being a statistic, nature does not always comply with it, as happened in the underwater eruption of El Hierro in 2011, does only 10 years.

However, today we have seismographs on all the islands for seismic monitoring, along with studies of geodesy, gravimetry, measurements periodic temperature and subsoil gases, monitoring of different parameters by satellite, among others. There are risks to the population, goods and services.

Whenever near an eruption, earthquakes are one of the most important alerts . At the beginning of the seismic crises prior to the eruptions, there are hundreds of earthquakes daily, with intensities below three degrees.

At this moment, with that seismicity, we know that the gases and magma are already beginning to rise and press the oceanic crust and the insular volcanic edifice. Therefore, the magma wants to go outside.

When magma is going to break the insular, subaerial or underwater surface, it usually does so with earthquakes of more than four degrees of intensity. Then one or more eruptive fissures are generated, with the exit of magma (gases, liquid and crystals) to the outside.

Ciudadanos en una ladera observan la erupción del volcán Cumbre Vieja
According to statistics, the eruptions in the Canary Islands are events that are seen between each 35 to 40 years.

In the case of La Palma, we have felt during the weeks leading up to the eruption about 25 . 000 earthquakes , always below three degrees. Until one came on Sunday 19 of September with an intensity of 4.2 at 15 hours and a main eruptive fissure was formed with the emission of volcanic materials in the area of Cabeza de Vaca (about 675 meters high). This volcanic process is what we are seeing live and direct in the audiovisual media.

José Mangas Viñuela is a professor and member of the Institute of Oceanography and Global Change (IOCAG), University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. His article was published in The Conversation whose original version you can read here.