Volcanic Explosivity Index

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VEI and ejecta volume correlation
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VEI and ejecta volume correlation

The Volcanic Explosivity Index (VEI) was devised by Chris Newhall of the U.S. Geological Survey and Steve Self at the University of Hawaii in 1982 to provide a relative measure of the explosiveness of volcanic eruptions.

Volume of products, eruption cloud height, and qualitative observations (using terms ranging from "gentle" to "mega-colossal") are used to determine the explosivity value. The scale is open-ended and ranges from 0, for non-explosive eruptions (less than 104 cubic metres of tephra ejected) to 8, for mega-colossal explosive eruptions that can eject 1012 cubic metres of tephra and have a cloud column height of over 25 km. Each interval on the scale represents a ten-fold increase in observed eruption criteria.

Note that ash, volcanic bombs, and ignimbrite are all treated alike - this is due to taking into account of the vesicularity (gas bubbling) of the volcanic products in question and the DRE (Dense Rock Equivalent) is calculated to give the actual amount of magma erupted. But one weakness is that the VEI does not take into account the magnitude of power output of an eruption. However, this is extremely difficult to detect with prehistoric or unobserved eruptions.

Contents

[edit] Classification

VEI Classification Description Plume Ejecta volume Frequency Example Occurrences †
0 Hawaiian non-explosive < 100 m > 1000 m³ daily Kilauea -
1 Hawaiian/Strombolian gentle 100-1000 m > 10,000 m³ daily Stromboli -
2 Strombolian/Vulcanian explosive 1-5 km > 1,000,000 m³ weekly Galeras (1993) 3477†
3 Vulcanian/Pelean severe 3-15 km > 10,000,000 m³ yearly Nevado del Ruiz (1985) 868
4 Pelean/Plinian cataclysmic 10-25 km > 0.1 km³ ≥ 10 yrs Galunggung (1982) 278
5 Plinian paroxysmal > 25 km > 1 km³ ≥ 50 yrs St. Helens (1980) 84
6 Plinian/Ultra-Plinian colossal > 25 km > 10 km³ ≥ 100 yrs Krakatoa (1883) 39
7 Plinian/Ultra-Plinian super-colossal > 25 km > 100 km³ ≥ 1000 yrs Tambora (1815) 4
8 Plinian/Ultra-Plinian mega-colossal > 25 km > 1,000 km³ ≥ 10,000 yrs Toba (73,000 BP) -
9 Plinian/Ultra-Plinian super-mega-colossal > 25 km > 10,000 km3 ≥ 100,000 years  ? -
10 Plinian/Ultra-Plinian hyper-mega-colossal > 25 km > 100,000 km3 ≥ 1,000,000 years Deccan Traps (64,000,000 BP) -
11 Plinian/Ultra-Plinian ultra-mega-colossal > 25 km > 1,000,000 km3 ≥ 10,000,000 years Siberian Traps (251 million years BP) -

† Count of eruptions in the last 10,000 years based on 1994 figures maintained by the Global Volcanism Program of the Smithsonian Institution

[edit] List of eruptions

VEI Name Year
0 Mauna Loa 1984
Piton de la Fournaise 2004
1 Kilauea 1983 - present
Nyiragongo 2002
2 Mount Hood 1865-1866
Kilauea 1924
Tristan da Cunha 1961
Whakaari/White Island 2001
Mount Usu 2000-2001
3 Mount Vesuvius 1913-1944
Surtsey 1963-1967
Eldfell 1973
Nevado del Ruiz 1985
Mount Etna 2002-2003
4 Mount Pelée 1902
Parícutin 1943-1952
Hekla 1947
Galunggung 1982
Mount Spurr 1992
5 Mount Vesuvius (Pompeii eruption) 79
Mount Agung 1963
Mount St. Helens (1980 eruption) 1980
El Chichón 1982
Mount Hudson 1991
6 Mount Etna 8000 BP?
Mount Vesuvius (Avellino eruption) 1660 BC ± 43 years
Santorini (Minoan eruption) 1620s BC or 1520s BC
Ilopango 450 ± 30 years
Baekdu Mountain (Tianchi eruption) 1000
Kuwae 1452 or 1453
Laki 1783
Krakatoa 1883
Novarupta (1912 eruption) 1912
Mount Pinatubo 1991
7 Yellowstone (Mesa Falls eruption) 1,300,000 BP
Long Valley Caldera 760,000 BP
Kurile 6440 BC ± 25 years
Mount Mazama 4860 BC
Kikai (Akahoya eruption) 4350 BC
Taupo 181
Mount Tambora 1815
8 La Garita Caldera 27 million years BP
Yellowstone (Huckleberry Ridge eruption) 2,200,000 BP
Yellowstone (Lava Creek eruption) 640,000 BP
Toba 73,000 BP
Taupo (Oruanui eruption) 26,500 BP
10 Columbia River Basalt Group 16.5 million years BP
Deccan Traps 64 million years BP
11 Siberian Traps 251 million years BP

Note that there have not been any Holocene (within the last 10,000 years) eruptions with a VEI of 8. Lake Taupo's Oruanui eruption is probably the most recent, occurring 26,500 years ago. There is a new theory that the Minoan eruption of Santorini may have been twice as large as originally thought, placing it behind Taupo's 181 eruption and Mount Tambora as the third largest eruption in recorded history.[1]

[edit] See also

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ McCoy, F. W. and Dunn, S., 2002, Modelling the Climatic Effects fo the LBA Eruption of Thera: New Calculations of Tephra Volumes May Suggest a Significantly Larger Eruption than Previously Reported [abst.]; Proceedings of the Chapman Conference on Volcanism and the Earth’s Atmosphere, Am. Geophysical Union, Santorini, Greece: 21-22.

[edit] References

[edit] External links