Publication Date:
2019-08-27
Description:
Fifteen Landsat TM images of Lascar volcano (Chile), recorded between December 1984 and April 1992, document the evolution of a lava dome within the summit crater. In every image, the two short-wavelength infrared bands, 5 and 7, have detected thermal radiation from the volcano. As a consequence of the Planck distribution function, the relative response of these two channels depends on the proportions of very hot surfaces occupying tiny pixel areas and broader regions at moderate temperatures. Intercomparison of bands 5 and 7 thereby provides a means for interpreting TM thermal anomalies even in the absence of ground observations. Pronounced changes in the configuration and intensity of the Lascar anomaly suggest that the volcano has experienced at least two cycles of lava dome activity since 1984. The first of these progressed through a 'cooling' period, possibly reflecting a reduced flux of magmatic volatiles at the surface, and culminated in an explosive eruption on September 16, 1986, which appears to have completely destroyed the inferred lava dome.
Keywords:
GEOPHYSICS
Type:
Journal of Geophysical Research (ISSN 0148-0227); 98; B3; p. 4269-4286.
Format:
text
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