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Date: May 22, 2022 at 21:43:36
From: JTRIV, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Explosive Tonga volcano 'surprisingly intact'

URL: Explosive Tonga volcano 'surprisingly intact'


Explosive Tonga volcano 'surprisingly intact'

Jonathan Amos
Science correspondent
@BBCAmoson Twitter

Published53 minutes ago

The Tonga underwater volcano that produced a
spectacular eruption in January remains astonishingly
intact.

A New Zealand-led team has just finished mapping the
flanks of the seamount, which many people thought might
have been torn apart in the ferocity of the event.

But structurally, Hunga-Tonga Hunga-Ha'apai hasn't
changed that much.

The Tonga eruption produced the biggest atmospheric
explosion recorded on Earth in more than a century.

It generated tsunamis across the Pacific and in other
ocean basins around the world. It even lifted the
clouds over the UK, 16,500km away. Mercifully, only a
handful of people lost their lives in the kingdom of
Tonga.

New Zealand's National Institute for Water and
Atmospheric (NIWA) Research has now managed to get in
close with a ship to map the post-eruption shape of
Hunga-Tonga Hunga-Ha'apai (HTHH) and of the surrounding
seafloor.

Although there's clearly been a lot of ash deposition
and movement of sediment, the volcano continues to
stand tall.

The expedition leader, NIWA marine geologist Kevin
Mackay, said he was taken aback by what he'd seen in
the Research Vessel (RV) Tangaroa's sonar data.

"Given the violence of the eruption on 15 January, I'd
expected the edifice to either have collapsed or been
blown apart, and this is not the case," he explained.

"While the volcano appeared intact, the seafloor showed
some dramatic effects of the eruption. There is fine
sandy mud and deep ash ripples as far as 50km away from
the volcano, with gouged valleys and huge piles of
sediment."

From its 22,000-sq-km survey, the Tangaroa team
calculates that about 6 to 7 cubic km of material have
been added to the seafloor.

This is ash and rock that was initially ejected by the
volcano into the air but which then fell back down into
the water and descended the flanks of the submarine
mountain to run out over the ocean bottom.

These density, or pyroclastic, flows were the major
factor in generating the tsunami waves that inundated
local islands, Mr Mackay told BBC News.

The 1.8km-high HTHH was last surveyed in 2016.
Combining the previous data with Tangaroa's new
information has allowed scientists to make a
"difference map".

The deposition of all the new material is marked in red
(see top image). Blue indicates where material has been
lost. This is mostly from around the neck of the
volcano. The researchers say 2 to 3 cubic km has come
away from the upper portions of HTHH.

In addition to the sonar survey, the Tangaroa's crew
also studied the local ocean ecosystem.

Unsurprisingly, the flanks of the volcano are now
devoid of biology, but the team only had to travel
about 15km to find fish and mussels thriving on other
seamounts.

"Both of these examples imply a resilience of animal
populations in the region," said NIWA fisheries expert
Dr Malcolm Clark. "And this is important because it can
give insights into how the eruption can affect the
surrounding sealife and what the possible chances of
recovery might be."

The researchers also tested the water column for
physical and chemical characteristics, including
temperature, nutrients and oxygen concentration. In
places, the ash-fall has had a fertilisation effect and
triggered plankton blooms. But the flip side is that
researchers could identify, too, zones where oxygen in
the water has become depleted.

The team took thousands of pictures and collected
hundreds of samples during the cruise, including 115
sediment cores and 250kg of rock, some of which was
newly formed in the eruption.

The RV Tangaroa did not survey directly over Hunga-
Tonga's opening, or caldera.

This will be left to a robot boat developed by the UK
company Sea-Kit International. The 12m uncrewed surface
vessel, called Maxlimer, is currently in Singapore en
route to Tongatapu, the main island in the Tongan
archipelago.

Because the boat can be controlled at a distance, it
will be permitted to operate for extended periods over
the caldera. The caution is warranted because the
volcano appears still to be active.

NIWA marine ecologist Dr Sarah Seabrook said this was
evident from a persistent ash layer near the volcano at
a depth of about 200m.

"Our initial analyses on the origin of the ash layer
suggest that it is not a remnant of the January
eruption, but may instead show the volcano is still
venting. That is, it's actively releasing volcanic ash,
albeit on a far smaller scale," she explained.

The information from Maxlimer's multi-beam sonar
equipment is expected to be particularly instructive. A
naval ship that sailed across the caldera recently
found the depth of water over the caldera had increased
dramatically.

Pre-eruption there was only 150-200m of seawater. Post-
eruption there is now 800m or more of water. HTHH's
magma chamber was hollowed out.

"Maxlimer definitely has the ability to measure that
deep," said Mr Mackay. "And what we're really hoping is
that once we get a really accurate map of the caldera,
we can confirm those volumes of material that we've
already initially indicated."

The RV Tangaroa's month-long mapping project was funded
by the Nippon Foundation of Japan and organised by
NIWA, together with Seabed2030, which is an
international effort to properly chart Earth's ocean
floor.


Responses:
[95876] [95878]


95876


Date: May 23, 2022 at 11:07:21
From: pamela, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Explosive Tonga volcano 'surprisingly intact'


Thanks for the update


Responses:
[95878]


95878


Date: May 24, 2022 at 02:02:08
From: jordan, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Explosive Tonga volcano 'surprisingly intact'


Thanks for the update:

maybe a bigger eruption is still to come

"Our initial analyses on the origin of the ash layer suggest that it is not a remnant of the January eruption, but may instead show the volcano is still venting. That is, it's actively releasing volcanic ash, albeit on a far smaller scale," she explained.


Responses:
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