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Major and trace element geochemistry of El Chichón volcano-hydrothermal system (Chiapas, México) in 2006-2007: implications for future geochemical monitoring

Major and trace element geochemistry of El Chichón volcano-hydrothermal system (Chiapas, México) in 2006-2007: implications for future geochemical monitoring
Major and trace element geochemistry of El Chichón volcano-hydrothermal system (Chiapas, México) in 2006-2007: implications for future geochemical monitoring
Isotopic, major and trace element composition studies for the crater lake, the Soap Pool and thermal springs at El Chichón volcano in November 2006-October 2007 confirm the complex relationship between annual rainfall distribution and crater lake volume and chemistry. In 2001, 2004 and 2007 high volume high-Cl lake may be related to reactivation of high discharge (>10 kg/s) saline near-neutral water from the Soap Pool boiling springs into the lake, a few months (~January) after the end of the rainy season (June-October). The peak lake volume occurred in March 2007 (~6 x 105 m3).
Agua Tibia 2 thermal springs discharge near the foot of the SW dome but their chemistry suggests a lower temperature regime, an enhanced water-rock interaction and basement contribution (evaporites and carbonates), anhydrite leaching from the 1982 pyroclastic deposits, rather than dome activity. New suggestions of crater lake seepage are evidenced by the Agua Caliente thermal springs.
Existing models on the “crater lake-Soap Pool spring” and the deep hydrothermal system are discussed. Chemical changes in the deep geothermal aquifer feeding the thermal springs may predict dome rise. Future volcanic surveillance should focus on spring chemistry variations, as well as crater lake monitoring.
El Chichón, fluid geochemistry, volcanic surveillance
0016-7169
55-72
Rouwet, D.
15eea757-d654-4a0e-9b3c-9ecab0a60983
Bellomo, S.
da9e11c4-a60f-4b7b-a5e4-7b19e42ae5a2
Brusca, L.
6cdab6ab-7a67-4670-9172-97c65ddf136f
Inguaggiato, S.
9ddcc537-babe-4820-a995-24cea83d106d
Mora, R.
c9b7710c-5f95-4886-8f5f-ad2bc6ec5f9e
Mazot, A.
5b379913-cd8f-40b3-9113-72db86b95107
Bernard, R.
8ec84292-fb63-48cf-82cc-de901aee5f2c
Cassidy, M.
67673759-386d-4138-a782-680799419beb
Taran, Y.
79c3914f-17a4-4422-a1d1-c834fcdd1209
Rouwet, D.
15eea757-d654-4a0e-9b3c-9ecab0a60983
Bellomo, S.
da9e11c4-a60f-4b7b-a5e4-7b19e42ae5a2
Brusca, L.
6cdab6ab-7a67-4670-9172-97c65ddf136f
Inguaggiato, S.
9ddcc537-babe-4820-a995-24cea83d106d
Mora, R.
c9b7710c-5f95-4886-8f5f-ad2bc6ec5f9e
Mazot, A.
5b379913-cd8f-40b3-9113-72db86b95107
Bernard, R.
8ec84292-fb63-48cf-82cc-de901aee5f2c
Cassidy, M.
67673759-386d-4138-a782-680799419beb
Taran, Y.
79c3914f-17a4-4422-a1d1-c834fcdd1209

Rouwet, D., Bellomo, S., Brusca, L., Inguaggiato, S., Mora, R., Mazot, A., Bernard, R., Cassidy, M. and Taran, Y. (2009) Major and trace element geochemistry of El Chichón volcano-hydrothermal system (Chiapas, México) in 2006-2007: implications for future geochemical monitoring. Geofísica Internacional, 48 (1), 55-72.

Record type: Article

Abstract

Isotopic, major and trace element composition studies for the crater lake, the Soap Pool and thermal springs at El Chichón volcano in November 2006-October 2007 confirm the complex relationship between annual rainfall distribution and crater lake volume and chemistry. In 2001, 2004 and 2007 high volume high-Cl lake may be related to reactivation of high discharge (>10 kg/s) saline near-neutral water from the Soap Pool boiling springs into the lake, a few months (~January) after the end of the rainy season (June-October). The peak lake volume occurred in March 2007 (~6 x 105 m3).
Agua Tibia 2 thermal springs discharge near the foot of the SW dome but their chemistry suggests a lower temperature regime, an enhanced water-rock interaction and basement contribution (evaporites and carbonates), anhydrite leaching from the 1982 pyroclastic deposits, rather than dome activity. New suggestions of crater lake seepage are evidenced by the Agua Caliente thermal springs.
Existing models on the “crater lake-Soap Pool spring” and the deep hydrothermal system are discussed. Chemical changes in the deep geothermal aquifer feeding the thermal springs may predict dome rise. Future volcanic surveillance should focus on spring chemistry variations, as well as crater lake monitoring.

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More information

Published date: 2009
Keywords: El Chichón, fluid geochemistry, volcanic surveillance
Organisations: Geochemistry

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 338938
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/338938
ISSN: 0016-7169
PURE UUID: e6c9fc10-4932-46e7-96db-35be9e3096fb

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Date deposited: 17 May 2012 15:32
Last modified: 08 Jan 2022 17:54

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Contributors

Author: D. Rouwet
Author: S. Bellomo
Author: L. Brusca
Author: S. Inguaggiato
Author: R. Mora
Author: A. Mazot
Author: R. Bernard
Author: M. Cassidy
Author: Y. Taran

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