Sombrero uplift
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In the central Andes mountains, satellites have detected ground deformation under way above a major subterranean magma body.
The Altiplano–Puna volcanic province is part of an active volcanic arc in South America’s central Andes. Extending through Peru, southwestern Bolivia, Chile and northwestern Argentina, it is home to a number of large calderas formed following catastrophic eruptions.
The Altiplano–Puna volcanic province is part of an active volcanic arc in South America’s central Andes. Extending through Peru, southwestern Bolivia, Chile and northwestern Argentina, it is home to a number of large calderas formed following catastrophic eruptions.
Beneath the surface of Altiplano–Puna, about 17–19 km deep, lies the
largest known active magma body in Earth’s continental crust.
Satellites show that the ground in this area has been rising by about 10 mm per year over the past 20 years.
In a study published today in Science,
scientists used radar data from the ERS and Envisat missions to study
an unusual uplift near the Uturuncu volcano, which had been dormant for
270 000 years.
The surrounding area, however, is sinking at a slower rate of about 2 mm
per year. With the wide-brimmed hat-like shape this creates, the study
team has nicknamed this the ‘sombrero uplift’.
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| HI-RES JPEG (Size: 149 kb) |
Displacements calculated using data from ERS (black symbols) and Envisat
(grey symbols) over the Altiplano–Puna volcanic province 1992–2010.
Credits: Y. Fialko, SIO/UCSD
The deformation is attributed to a ballooning of a buoyant volume of molten rock at the top of the Altiplano–Puna magma body.
The authors suggest that much of the melt is being withdrawn from the
adjacent parts of the magma body, causing the peripheral subsidence.
The ground deformation was measured using Interferometric Synthetic
Aperture Radar – or InSAR – a remote sensing technique where two or more
radar images over the same area are combined to detect slight surface
changes occurring between acquisitions.
Changes on the ground cause changes in the radar signal and lead to
rainbow-coloured interference patterns in the combined image, known as a
‘SAR interferogram’.
In order to get a three-dimensional look at the area of interest, in
2006 the study team asked ESA to task the ERS-2 and Envisat satellites
to acquire more data from both the northbound and southbound orbits over
Altiplano-Puna.
Altiplano
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This Envisat image features salt flats in southwest Bolivia, near the
crest of the Andes Mountains. The Salar de Uyuni (the lower white area)
is the largest salt flat in the world, occupying 10 582 sq km. It is
located at the southern end of the Altiplano, a high plain of inland
drainage in the central Andes.
Credits: ESA
“It was really important to have good data from different lines of
sight, as this allowed us to estimate contributions from vertical and
horizontal motion of Earth’s surface, and place crucial constraints on
depth and mechanism of the inflation source,” said Yuri Fialko,
Professor of Geophysics at the University of California San Diego and
the lead author of the paper.
“Back in 2006, it looked like the satellites stopped acquiring data from
the ascending orbits over the area of interest. Fortunately, ESA was
very responsive to our requests, and generated an excellent dataset that
made our study possible.”
ESA
Guillermo Gonzalo sánchez Achutegui
ayabaca@gmail.com
ayabaca@hotmail.com
ayabaca@yahoo.com
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