Seismological Investigation of Katla Volcanic System (Iceland) : 3D Velocity Structure and Overall Seismicity Pattern

The work in this thesis concentrates on Katla volcano in southern Iceland. This is one of Europe’s most active volcanoes and its history tells us that it poses many threats to society, both locally (Iceland) and on a broader scale (Europe). Its geological setting is complex, where the effects of a m...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jeddi, Zeinab
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Uppsala universitet, Institutionen för geovetenskaper 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-303342
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-554-9696-8
id ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-uu-303342
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-uu-3033422016-11-03T05:09:25ZSeismological Investigation of Katla Volcanic System (Iceland) : 3D Velocity Structure and Overall Seismicity PatternengJeddi, ZeinabUppsala universitet, Institutionen för geovetenskaperUppsala2016Volcano tomographyvolcano seismicityKatla volcanoEarthquake locationThe work in this thesis concentrates on Katla volcano in southern Iceland. This is one of Europe’s most active volcanoes and its history tells us that it poses many threats to society, both locally (Iceland) and on a broader scale (Europe). Its geological setting is complex, where the effects of a melting anomaly in the mantle and a changing rift geometry, perturb the classical setting of volcanism in a rifting setting. The work has focused on two aspects. The first is the varying distribution of physical properties in the subsurface around the volcano. The second is the distribution of microearthquakes around the volcano. The physical properties that we study are the speeds of seismic waves that reflect variations of temperature, composition and fracturing of the rocks. These can, therefore, help us learn about long-term processes in the volcano. The seismicity gives shorter-term information about deformation associated with current processes. I have applied two tomographic techniques to study Katla’s subsurface to a depth of 5-10 km, namely local-earthquake and ambient-noise tomography. The former makes use of the timing of waves generated by local earthquakes to constrain the earthquakes’ locations and the distribution of wave speed. Here I have concentrated on compressional waves or P waves with a typical frequency content around 10 Hz. With the latter, surface waves are extracted from microseismic noise that is generated far away at sea and their timing is measured to constrain their wave-speed distribution, which then is used to map shear-wave velocity variations. This is done at a typical frequency of 0.3 Hz. I find that the volcano contains rocks of higher velocity than its surroundings, that Katla’s caldera is underlain by low velocities at shallow depth that may be explained by hot or partially molten rocks and that beneath the caldera lies a volume of particularly high velocities that may constitute differentiated cumulates. But, I also find that it is not simple to compare results from such different wave types and discuss a number of complications in that regard. In addition to the well-known microearthquake distribution in the caldera region of Katla and to its west, we have discovered two additional areas of microearthquake activity on the volcano’s flanks, south and east of the caldera. These point to current activity and are, therefore, of interest from a hazard point of view. However, it is difficult to pinpoint their underlying process. Speculation about possible interpretation leads me to hydrothermal processes or small pockets of melt ascending due to their buoyancy or locally enhancing fluid pressure, thereby lowering the effective stress. Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summaryinfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-303342urn:isbn:978-91-554-9696-8Digital Comprehensive Summaries of Uppsala Dissertations from the Faculty of Science and Technology, 1651-6214 ; 1430application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Volcano tomography
volcano seismicity
Katla volcano
Earthquake location
spellingShingle Volcano tomography
volcano seismicity
Katla volcano
Earthquake location
Jeddi, Zeinab
Seismological Investigation of Katla Volcanic System (Iceland) : 3D Velocity Structure and Overall Seismicity Pattern
description The work in this thesis concentrates on Katla volcano in southern Iceland. This is one of Europe’s most active volcanoes and its history tells us that it poses many threats to society, both locally (Iceland) and on a broader scale (Europe). Its geological setting is complex, where the effects of a melting anomaly in the mantle and a changing rift geometry, perturb the classical setting of volcanism in a rifting setting. The work has focused on two aspects. The first is the varying distribution of physical properties in the subsurface around the volcano. The second is the distribution of microearthquakes around the volcano. The physical properties that we study are the speeds of seismic waves that reflect variations of temperature, composition and fracturing of the rocks. These can, therefore, help us learn about long-term processes in the volcano. The seismicity gives shorter-term information about deformation associated with current processes. I have applied two tomographic techniques to study Katla’s subsurface to a depth of 5-10 km, namely local-earthquake and ambient-noise tomography. The former makes use of the timing of waves generated by local earthquakes to constrain the earthquakes’ locations and the distribution of wave speed. Here I have concentrated on compressional waves or P waves with a typical frequency content around 10 Hz. With the latter, surface waves are extracted from microseismic noise that is generated far away at sea and their timing is measured to constrain their wave-speed distribution, which then is used to map shear-wave velocity variations. This is done at a typical frequency of 0.3 Hz. I find that the volcano contains rocks of higher velocity than its surroundings, that Katla’s caldera is underlain by low velocities at shallow depth that may be explained by hot or partially molten rocks and that beneath the caldera lies a volume of particularly high velocities that may constitute differentiated cumulates. But, I also find that it is not simple to compare results from such different wave types and discuss a number of complications in that regard. In addition to the well-known microearthquake distribution in the caldera region of Katla and to its west, we have discovered two additional areas of microearthquake activity on the volcano’s flanks, south and east of the caldera. These point to current activity and are, therefore, of interest from a hazard point of view. However, it is difficult to pinpoint their underlying process. Speculation about possible interpretation leads me to hydrothermal processes or small pockets of melt ascending due to their buoyancy or locally enhancing fluid pressure, thereby lowering the effective stress.
author Jeddi, Zeinab
author_facet Jeddi, Zeinab
author_sort Jeddi, Zeinab
title Seismological Investigation of Katla Volcanic System (Iceland) : 3D Velocity Structure and Overall Seismicity Pattern
title_short Seismological Investigation of Katla Volcanic System (Iceland) : 3D Velocity Structure and Overall Seismicity Pattern
title_full Seismological Investigation of Katla Volcanic System (Iceland) : 3D Velocity Structure and Overall Seismicity Pattern
title_fullStr Seismological Investigation of Katla Volcanic System (Iceland) : 3D Velocity Structure and Overall Seismicity Pattern
title_full_unstemmed Seismological Investigation of Katla Volcanic System (Iceland) : 3D Velocity Structure and Overall Seismicity Pattern
title_sort seismological investigation of katla volcanic system (iceland) : 3d velocity structure and overall seismicity pattern
publisher Uppsala universitet, Institutionen för geovetenskaper
publishDate 2016
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-303342
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-554-9696-8
work_keys_str_mv AT jeddizeinab seismologicalinvestigationofkatlavolcanicsystemiceland3dvelocitystructureandoverallseismicitypattern
_version_ 1718391218006654976