Remote sampling of water from Yugama crater lake at Kusatsu-Shirane volcano, Japan, was performed using a drone. Despite the high altitude of over 2000 m above sea level, our simple method was successful in retrieving a 250 mL sample of lake water. The procedure presented here is easy for any researcher to follow who operates a drone without additional special apparatus. We compare the lake water sampled by drone with that sampled by hand at a site where regular samplings have previously been carried out. Chemical concentrations and stable isotope ratios are largely consistent between the two techniques. As the drone can fly automatically with the aid of navigation by Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS), it is possible to repeatedly sample lake water from the same location, even when entry to Yugama crater lake is restricted due to the risk of eruption.
Minor seismicity may occur at volcanoes with hydrothermal system before a steam eruption. To forecast any steam eruption, it is indispensable to detect and understand the nature of this shallow seismicity. As the fumarolic gas resides in the hydrothermal system, it may provide insights for elucidating the nature of any seismicity and thus forecast steam eruptions. At Kusatsu-Shirane volcano Japan, intense seismic activity took place in 2014 and 2018. To investigate the relationship between the seismicity and gas chemistry, five fumarolic gas discharges have been repeatedly analyzed. Since July 2014 to November 2017 a monotonic decrease in CO 2 /H 2 O, He/H 2 O and N 2 /H 2 O ratios was recorded in the fumarolic gasses located north of the summit of volcano, suggesting the decline of the magmatic component. On the contrary the CH 4 /H 2 O ratio significantly increased during the seismically quiet period, indicating that reduced conditions developed in the hydrothermal system, favoring the formation of CH 4. The high N 2 /He ratio in the quiet period indicates the addition of N 2 , likely deriving from the crustal rocks hosting hydrothermal reservoir. The N 2 /He ratio in 2018 was significantly lower than those recorded in 2014, indicating the evolution of magma with the progress of degassing. The δD(H 2 O) and δ 18 O(H 2 O) values and the CO 2 /H 2 O ratios of fumarolic gas discharges were modeled with the following processes: generation of vapor phase after the mixing between magmatic gas and a cold groundwater with meteoric origin, addition of vapor phase with meteoric origin, and partial condensation of water vapor near surface. Only a single magmatic gas is necessary for the above modeling. These data suggest that at Kusatsu-Shirane volcano the activation of seismicity was synchronized with the increase of the magmatic component in the fumarolic gas. It is postulated that the injection of magmatic gas increased the fluid pressure in the reservoir, which triggered seismicity. The injection would have been triggered by a break of the sealing zone surrounding the degassing magma. The injection of magmatic gas can be detected by monitoring the composition of the fumarolic gas, thus giving the possibility to forecast any future seismicity.
Definite increases in the components ratios of CO 2 /H 2 O, CO 2 /H 2 S, CO 2 /CH 4 and He/CH 4 were observed at the fumarolic gases from Owakudani geothermal area located at the center of Hakone volcanic caldera (Honshu Island, Japan), synchronized with the earthquake swarm in 2015. Such variations were due to the dominance of a magmatic component over a hydrothermal component, suggesting the earthquake swarm was produced by the injection of magmatic gases into the hydrothermal system. The CO 2 /H 2 O ratio of magmatic gas was estimated to be 0.0045 before the earthquake swarm, which increased up to 0.013 during the earthquake swarm, likely produced by the pressurization of magma as a result of magma sealing where the pressure increment in magma was estimated to be 3% to the lithostatic pressure. The H 2 O and CO 2 concentration in magma were estimated to be 6.3 wt% and 20 wt ppm, respectively, assuming a temperature 900 °C and a rhyolitic composition. In May 2015, a few months prior to the earthquake swarm in May 2015, a sharp increase in the Ar/CO 2 and N 2 /He ratios and a decrease in the isotopic ratio of H 2 O were observed at the fumarolic gas. The invasion of air into the hydrothermal system increased the Ar/CO 2 and N 2 /He ratios. The decrease in the isotopic ratio of H 2 O was induced by partial condensation of H 2 O vapor.
Interpreting the triggering mechanisms for phreatic eruptions is a key to improving the hazard assessment of crater lakes. Yugama Crater Lake at Kusatsu-Shirane volcano, Japan, is the site of frequent phreatic eruptions with the recent eruptions in 1982–83, 1989, and 1996, as well as volcanic unrest, including earthquake swarms in 2014 and 2018. To understand the magma–hydrothermal interaction beneath Yugama Crater Lake, we analyzed lake waters from November 2005 to May 2021. From 2005 to 2012, Cl and SO4 concentrations decreased slowly, suggesting the development of a self-sealing zone surrounding the crystallizing magma. We focused on Ca, Al, and Si concentrations as representatives of the breach and dissolution of minerals comprising the self-sealing zone and the Mg/Cl ratio as an indicator for enhanced interaction between groundwater and hot plastic rock within the self-sealing zone. In 2006–2007, the Ca, Al, Si concentrations and the Mg/Cl ratio increased. No Cl and SO4 increase during this period suggests the self-sealing zone was leached by deep circulating groundwater rather than by magmatic fluids injection. After the 2014 earthquakes, Ca, Al, and Si increased again but were associated with a significant Cl increase and a pH decrease. We believe that the HCl-rich magmatic fluids breached the self-sealing zone, leading to fluids injection from the crystallizing magma to the Yugama crater. During this period, the Mg/Cl ratio did not increase, meaning that magmatic fluids ascending from the breached area of the self-sealing zone inhibited deep intrusion of groundwater into the hot plastic rock region. In 2018, magmatic fluids ascended through the self-sealing zone again with less intensity than in 2014. All eruptions since 1982 have been accompanied by a Mg/Cl ratio increase and a Cl decrease, whereas, when a significant HCl input occurs, as in 2014, no eruptions and no Mg/Cl ratio increase occurred. This demonstrates that the groundwater–hot plastic rock interaction, rather than the magmatic fluids input, played an essential role in triggering phreatic eruptions; i.e., phreatic eruptions can potentially occur without clear signs of fresh magma intrusions.
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