Surface deformation time series and source modeling for a volcanic complex system based on satellite wide swath and image mode interferometry: The Lazufre system, central Andes
Abstract
The variable spatio-temporal scales of Earth's surface deformation in potentially hazardous volcanic areas pose a challenge for observation and assessment. Here we used Envisat data acquired in Wide Swath Mode (WSM) and Image Mode (IM) from ascending and descending geometry, respectively, to study time-dependent ground uplift at the Lazufre volcanic system in Chile and Argentina. A least-squares adjustment was performed on 65 IM interferograms that covered the time period of 2003-2008. We obtained a clear trend of uplift reaching 15-16 cm in this 5-year interval. Using a joint inversion of ascending and descending interferograms, we evaluated the geometry and time-dependent progression of a horizontally extended pressurized source beneath the Lazufre volcanic system. Our results hence indicate that an extended magma body at a depth between 10 and 15 km would account for most of the ground uplift. The maximum inflation reached up to ~40 cm during 2003-2008. The lateral propagation velocity of the intrusion was estimated to be nearly constant at 5-10 km/yr during the observation time, which has important implications for the physical understanding of magma intrusion processes.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2009
- Bibcode:
- 2009AGUFM.G41A0702A
- Keywords:
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- 1243 GEODESY AND GRAVITY / Space geodetic surveys;
- 8419 VOLCANOLOGY / Volcano monitoring;
- 8485 VOLCANOLOGY / Remote sensing of volcanoes