2007
DOI: 10.1007/s00445-007-0153-2
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Sumisu volcano, Izu-Bonin arc, Japan: site of a silicic caldera-forming eruption from a small open-ocean island

Abstract: Sumisu volcano was the site of an eruption during 30-60 ka that introduced ∼48-50 km 3 of rhyolite tephra into the open-ocean environment at the front of the Izu-Bonin arc. The resulting caldera is 8 × 10 km in diameter, has steep inner walls 550-780 m high, and a floor averaging 900 m below sea level. In the course of five research cruises to the Sumisu area, a manned submersible, two ROVs, a Deep-Tow camera sled, and dredge samples were used to study the caldera and surrounding areas. These studies were augm… Show more

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Cited by 45 publications
(37 citation statements)
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References 28 publications
(31 reference statements)
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“…Caldera diameters range from 1.6 to 6 km, within the somewhat larger range of caldera diameters recorded in the Tonga-Kermadec (Wright et al, 2006;Massoth et al, 2007;I.J. Graham et al, 2008) and Izu-Bonin (Yuasa et al, 1991;Fiske et al, 2001;Tani et al, 2008) intraoceanic arcs. Floors of the submarine calderas are imaged as nearly flat, with local mounds that may represent lavas or large hydrothermal mounds.…”
Section: Caldera Collapsesupporting
confidence: 51%
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“…Caldera diameters range from 1.6 to 6 km, within the somewhat larger range of caldera diameters recorded in the Tonga-Kermadec (Wright et al, 2006;Massoth et al, 2007;I.J. Graham et al, 2008) and Izu-Bonin (Yuasa et al, 1991;Fiske et al, 2001;Tani et al, 2008) intraoceanic arcs. Floors of the submarine calderas are imaged as nearly flat, with local mounds that may represent lavas or large hydrothermal mounds.…”
Section: Caldera Collapsesupporting
confidence: 51%
“…It is therefore possible that there is a general association between silicic products and caldera collapse in the South Sandwich arc as well documented in the Tonga-Kermadec (Worthington et al, 1999;Smith et al, 2003;Wright et al, 2006; I.J. Barker et al, 2012), Izu-Bonin (Fiske et al, 2001;Tani et al, 2008) and Vanuatu (Robin et al, 1993;Monzier et al, 1994) intra-oceanic arcs. Historic volcanic or hydrothermal activity has been observed at most of the South Sandwich calderas (Table 2).…”
Section: Caldera Collapsementioning
confidence: 95%
“…Velocity structure variations of both calderas are very similar. The Myojin Knoll caldera is estimated to have similar lithologies along the Sumisu rift, as indicated by geophysical and geological observations (Fiske et al 2001;Tani et al 2008;Tsuru et al 2008). This suggests that the Bayonnaise Knoll caldera and Myojin Knoll caldera also have similar lithologies, which are mainly composed of pumiceous sand and gravels; the data suggestive of this were revealed at the eastern margin of the Sumisu rift in the Izu-Ogasawara back-arc, i.e., Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) site 788 of Leg 126 (Taylor 1992).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 81%
“…The Bayonnaise Knoll caldera walls are mainly composed of thick volcanic breccia, as estimated from data similar to the comparisons between the velocity structure (Tsuru et al 2008) and geological sampling data (Naka et al 1995) in the Myojin Knoll caldera. In the case of the Sumisu caldera, there are symmetric characteristics along the north-south profile and asymmetric characteristics along the east-west profile that were discovered by a single-channel seismic survey (Tani et al 2008). Regarding the structural symmetry of the caldera, it presents different characteristics that include uncertainties of the effect of the direction for volcanic arrangement.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
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