‘Dormant’ California Supervolcano Packed With 240 Cubic Miles of Magma

Early winter in Long Valley.Image: Joshua Hammari/Wikimedia

It’s been around 100,000 years since California’s Long Valley supervolcano experienced a major eruption, but this supposedly dormant caldera has been acting a bit strangely over the past four decades. New research suggests 240 cubic miles of magma still exists within this supervolcano, but thankfully, a major eruption remains unlikely.

The Long Valley Caldera, located near Mammoth Mountain in eastern California, has been quiet for millennia, but its history is one of tremendous violence. Around 760,000 years ago, this supervolcano experienced a colossal six-day eruption that sent lava flows 30 miles (50 km) away and falling ash as far as Nebraska. The collapse of this volcano’s magma chamber resulted in the formation of the Long Valley Caldera, which experienced many subsequent eruptions during the following years, but nothing major for the past 100,000 years; a volcano forms a depression, called a caldera, after ejecting the majority of its magmatic material.

Map of the the Long Valley Caldera.Image: A. F. Flinders et al., 2018/Geology

Today, this dormant volcano features a bowl-shaped caldera about 20 miles long and 0.6 miles (one kilometer) deep, but it’s not as quiet as it appears. Since 1978, the dome of this caldera has been growing steadily higher—an observation which suggests new magma is leaking into the reservoir, or that it’s entering into its final stages, with the recent uplift related to the expulsion of its last remaining stores of liquid magma. But these are theories. Prior to the new study, scientists weren’t entirely sure about the caldera’s exact physical characteristics, despite extensive investigations over the past 40 years; previous research revealed small geologic features at very shallow depths, and very large features at deeper depths, creating a blindspot in the mid-crustal regions.

The updated model of the Long Valley magmatic system.Illustration: A. F. Flinders et al., 2018/Geology

A new study led by Ashton F. Flinders from the U.S. Geological Survey’s California Volcano Observatory in Menlo Park, California, is now offering the most detailed description of the Long Valley Caldera to date. The new research, published in the science journal Geology, suggests the reservoir contains over 240 cubic miles (1,000 cubic kilometers) of semi-molten magma. Of this total, approximately 27 percent is in a liquid state—and thank goodness for that. At least 50 percent of the magma within a caldera needs to be in a liquid state to facilitate a large-scale super-eruption, according to the researchers.

“We estimate the reservoir currently contains enough melt to support another supereruption comparable in size to the caldera-forming eruption [767,000 years ago],” write the authors in the study. “However, this volume and a relatively high melt fraction in no way ensures that the magma is eruptible.”

Phew. Despite these words of assurance, the researchers don’t know how the melted magma is distributed within the reservoir, which could mean that “normal” eruptions, i.e. non-super-eruptions, remain a distinct possibility. As this latest research suggests, this volcano may not be as dormant as we’ve been led to believe.

“While supervolcanoes like Long Valley are rare, understanding the volume and concentration of melt in their magma reservoirs is critical for determining their potential hazard,” the researchers write.

Cross section of the caldera. Image: A. F. Flinders et al., 2018/Geology

Flinders and his colleagues performed this work by analyzing seismic data collected for the past 26 years at locations within 95 miles (150 kilometers) of the caldera. They calculated the shear-wave velocity of the caldera’s internal structure using the historical earthquake tomography data (a technique in which x-rays are used to display a cross-section through a solid body, like the Earth’s crust), where high shear-wave velocity indicated low amplification of seismic waves and low shear-wave velocity represented areas experiencing intense amplification. The lower the shear-wave velocity, the more fluid the material.

Armed with this data, the researchers created a 3D image of the caldera’s interior, which they used to estimate the amount of molten and semi-molten magma within the chamber, including the 240 cubic miles of magma detected within a zone at the crust’s middle regions.

As for the gradually rising dome, the researchers say it’s likely the supervolcano going through its death throes, as its magma stores slowly transform into solid rock and squeegee out the remain lava. The Long Valley Caldera may still be capable of unleashing ordinary-sized eruptions, but nothing on the scale of what happened hundreds of thousands of years ago.

Sadly, the same cannot be said for another California caldera—the Yellowstone supervolcano, which is packed with about 2,400 cubic miles (10,000 cubic kilometers) of magma. It could be decades or even centuries before, or even if, this supervolcano erupts, so Californians can chill for now.

[Geology]


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