Earth:Taupo Volcano

From HandWiki
Short description: Volcanic crater lake in New Zealand
Volcano, lake, and caldera locations in the Taupo Volcanic Zone

Lake Taupo, in the centre of New Zealand’s North Island, is the caldera of a large rhyolitic supervolcano called the Taupo Volcano. This huge volcano has produced two of the world’s most violent eruptions in geologically recent times.

The Taupo Volcano forms part of the Taupo Volcanic Zone, a region of volcanic activity that extends from Ruapehu in the South, through the Taupo and Rotorua districts, to White Island, in the Bay of Plenty region.

Taupo began erupting about 300,000 years ago, but the main eruptions that still affect the surrounding landscape are the Oruanui eruption, about 26,500 years ago, which is responsible for the shape of the modern caldera, and the Hatepe eruption, dated 232 ± 5 CE.[1] However, there have been many more eruptions, with major ones every thousand years or so (see timeline of last 10,000 years of eruptions).[2][3][4]

Considering recent history alone, the volcano has been inactive for an unusually long period of time, but considering its long-term activity, it was inactive for much longer between 8100 and 5100 BCE (3,000 year inactivity, compared to the current 1,800 years). Some volcanoes within the Taupo Volcanic Zone have erupted far more recently, however, notably a violent VEI-5 eruption of Mount Tarawera in 1886, and frequent activity of Whakaari/White Island, which erupted most recently in December 2019.

Rhyolitic eruptions

<timeline> ImageSize = width:320 height:800 PlotArea = right:50 top:10 left:50 bottom:10 DateFormat = yyyy TimeAxis = orientation:vertical order:reverse Period = from:-10000 till:2050 AlignBars = early ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:1000 start:-10000 Colors =

 id:canvas value:rgb(1,1,0.85) 

BackgroundColors = canvas:canvas PlotData =

 width:15 color:white
 bar:test from:-10000 till:1200 # Pre Maori

PlotData =

 width:15 color:yellow
 bar:test from:1200 till:1840 # Pre accurate

PlotData =

 width:15 color:orange
 bar:test from:1840 till:2050 # Accurate

PlotData =

 at:-9999 shift:(30,-5) text: Recent eruptions of Taupo caldera
 at:-9999 shift:(200,-5) text: Eruptive
 at:-9850 shift:(210,-5) text: Index 
 at:-9700 shift:(200,-5) text: 6 5 4 3 2 1
 at:-9460 shift:(10,-5) text: 9460 BCE East/Central Unit B
 bar:test at:-9460 mark:(line,red)
 at:-9240 shift:(10,-2) text: 9240 BCE Te Kohaiakatu Pt  Unit C
 bar:test at:-9240 mark:(line,red)
 at:-9210 shift:(10,-10) text: 9210 BCE Acacia Bay Unit D
 bar:test at:-9210 mark:(line,red)
 at:-8130 shift:(10,-5) text: 8130 BCE East/Central Unit E
 bar:test at:-8130 mark:(line,red)
 at:-5100 shift:(10,-5) text: 5100 BCE Motutaiko Island Unit F
 bar:test at:-5100 mark:(line,red)
 at:-4700 shift:(10,-5) text: 4700 BCE East/Central Unit G
 bar:test at:-4700 mark:(line,red)
 at:-4100 shift:(10,-5) text: 4100 BCE Te Kohaiakatu Pt Unit H
 bar:test at:-4100 mark:(line,red)
 at:-4000 shift:(10,-8) text: 4000 BCE Unit I
 bar:test at:-4000 mark:(line,red)
 at:-3420 shift:(10,0) text: 3420 BCE Unit J
 bar:test at:-3420 mark:(line,red)
 at:-3170 shift:(10,7) text: 3170 BCE Te Kohaiakatu Pt Unit K
 bar:test at:-3170 mark:(line,red)
 at:-3120 shift:(10,0) text: 3120 BCE Te Kohaiakatu Pt Unit L
 bar:test at:-3120 mark:(line,red)  
 at:-3070 shift:(10,-5) text: 3070 BCE Te Kohaiakatu Pt Unit M
 bar:test at:-3070 mark:(line,red)  
 at:-2900 shift:(10,-3) text: 2900 BCE Te Kohaiakatu Pt Unit N
 bar:test at:-2900 mark:(line,red)  
 at:-2850 shift:(10,-9) text: 2850 BCE Te Tuhi Pt Unit O
 bar:test at:-2850 mark:(line,red) 
 at:-2800 shift:(10,-15) text: 2800 BCE Unit P 
 bar:test at:-2800 mark:(line,red)
 at:-2600 shift:(10,-11) text: 2600 BCE Te Kohaiakatu Pt Unit Q
 bar:test at:-2600 mark:(line,red)
 at:-2500 shift:(10,-14) text: 2500 BCE Motutaiko Island Unit R
 bar:test at:-2500 mark:(line,red) 
 at:-1460 shift:(10,-5) text: 1460 BCE Horomatangi reefs Unit S
 bar:test at:-1460 mark:(line,red)
 at:-1250 shift:(10,-5) text: 1250 BCE Te Kohaiakatu Pt Unit T
 bar:test at:-1250 mark:(line,red)
 at:-1050 shift:(10,-3) text: 1050 BCE Motutaiko Island Unit U
 bar:test at:-1050 mark:(line,red)  
 at:-1010 shift:(10,-9) text: 1010 BCE Te Kohaiakatu Pt Unit V
 bar:test at:-1010 mark:(line,red)  
 at:-800 shift:(10,-5) text: 800 BCE Ouaha Hills Unit W
 bar:test at:-800 mark:(line,red) 
 at:-200 shift:(10,-5) text: 200 BCE Te Kohaiakatu Pt Unit X
 bar:test at:-200 mark:(line,red)
 at:233 shift:(10,0) text: 233 Hatepe eruption Unit Y
 bar:test at:233 mark:(line,red)
 at:260 shift:(10,-10) text: 260 Eastern lake
 bar:test at:260 mark:(line,red) 
 at:1200 shift:(10,-5) text: Māori in NZ 
 bar:test at:1200 mark:(line,black) 
 at:1840 shift:(10,-5) text: European colonisation
 bar:test at:1840 mark:(line,black)

LineData =

 at:260 frompos:315 tillpos:320 color:red width:2
 at:233 frompos:260 tillpos:320 color:red width:2
 at:-200 frompos:280 tillpos:320 color:red width:2
 at:-800 frompos:300 tillpos:320 color:red width:2
 at:-1010 frompos:280 tillpos:320 color:red width:2
 at:-1050 frompos:280 tillpos:320 color:red width:2
 at:-1250 frompos:290 tillpos:320 color:red width:2
 at:-1460 frompos:260 tillpos:320 color:red width:2
 at:-2500 frompos:290 tillpos:320 color:red width:2
 at:-2600 frompos:280 tillpos:320 color:red width:2
 at:-2800 frompos:290 tillpos:320 color:red width:2
 at:-2850 frompos:290 tillpos:320 color:red width:2
 at:-2900 frompos:280 tillpos:320 color:red width:2
 at:-3070 frompos:280 tillpos:320 color:red width:2
 at:-3120 frompos:290 tillpos:320 color:red width:2
 at:-3170 frompos:280 tillpos:320 color:red width:2
 at:-3420 frompos:290 tillpos:320 color:red width:2
 at:-4000 frompos:290 tillpos:320 color:red width:2
 at:-4100 frompos:280 tillpos:320 color:red width:2
 at:-4700 frompos:280 tillpos:320 color:red width:2
 at:-5100 frompos:290 tillpos:320 color:red width:2
 at:-8130 frompos:270 tillpos:320 color:red width:2
 at:-9210 frompos:280 tillpos:320 color:red width:2
 at:-9240 frompos:270 tillpos:320 color:red width:2
 at:-9460 frompos:270 tillpos:320 color:red width:2
</timeline>

The Taupo Volcano erupts rhyolite, a viscous magma, with a high silica content.

If the magma does not contain much gas, rhyolite tends to just form a lava dome. However, when mixed with gas or steam, rhyolitic eruptions can be extremely violent. The magma froths to form pumice and ash, which is thrown out with great force.

If the volcano creates a stable plume, high in the atmosphere, the pumice and ash are blown sideways, and eventually falls to the ground, draping the landscape like snow.

If the material thrown out cools too rapidly and becomes denser than the air, it cannot rise as high, and suddenly collapses back to the ground, forming a pyroclastic flow, hitting the surface like water from a waterfall, and spreading sideways across the land at enormous speed. When the pumice and ash settles, it is sufficiently hot to stick together as a rock called ignimbrite. Pyroclastic flows can travel hundreds of kilometres an hour.

Earlier eruptions

Earlier ignimbrite eruptions occurred further north than Taupo. Some of these were enormous, and two eruptions around 1.25 and 1.0 million years ago were big enough to generate an ignimbrite sheet that covered the North Island from Auckland to Napier.

While Taupo has been active for 300,000 years, explosive eruptions became more common 65,000 years ago.

Oruanui eruption

Main page: Earth:Oruanui eruption
A large eruption column during the Oruanui eruption as it may have appeared from space

The Oruanui eruption of the Taupo Volcano was the world's largest known eruption in the past 70,000 years, with a Volcanic Explosivity Index of 8. It occurred around 26,500 years ago and generated approximately 430 km3 (100 cu mi) of pyroclastic fall deposits, 320 km3 (77 cu mi) of pyroclastic density current (PDC) deposits (mostly ignimbrite) and 420 km3 (100 cu mi) of primary intracaldera material, equivalent to 530 km3 (130 cu mi) of magma.[5][6][7]

Modern Lake Taupo partly fills the caldera generated during this eruption.

Tephra from the eruption covered much of the central North Island with ignimbrite up to 200 m (660 ft) deep. Most of New Zealand was affected by ashfall, with even an 18 cm (7.1 in) ash layer left on the Chatham Islands, 1,000 km (620 mi)away. Later erosion and sedimentation had long-lasting effects on the landscape, and caused the Waikato River to shift from the Hauraki Plains to its current course through the Waikato to the Tasman Sea.

Hatepe eruption

Main page: Earth:Hatepe eruption
The Taupo eruption's three main vents ran parallel to Lake Taupo's current southeastern shore.

The Taupo eruption (also known as the Hatepe eruption) represents the most recent major eruption of the Taupo Volcano, and occurred about 1,800 years ago. It represents the most violent eruption in the world in the last 5,000 years.[8][9]

Stages of eruption

The eruption went through several stages.

  • A minor eruption occurred beneath the ancestral Lake Taupo.
  • A dramatic increase in activity produced a high eruption column from a second vent, and pumice was deposited over a wide area.
  • Water entered the first vent and mixed with the magma, producing a white ash-rich pumice fall.
  • A new vent formed and produced a dark ash- and obsidian-rich fall deposit.
  • A larger eruption ensued, producing pumice over a huge area, and a small ignimbrite deposit.
  • The most destructive part of the eruption then occurred. Part of the vent area collapsed, unleashing about 30 km3 (7.2 cu mi) of material, that formed a fast-moving, 600–900 km/h (370–560 mph) pyroclastic flow.
  • Rhyolitic lava domes were extruded some years later, forming the Horomatangi reefs and Waitahanui bank.[10]

The main pyroclastic flow devastated the surrounding area, climbing over 1,500 m (4,900 ft) to overtop the nearby Kaimanawa Ranges and Mount Tongariro, and covering the land within 80 km (50 mi) with ignimbrite from Rotorua to Waiouru. Only Ruapehu was high enough to divert the flow.

The power of the pyroclastic flow was so strong that in some places it eroded more material off the ground surface than it replaced with ignimbrite. Valleys were filled with ignimbrite, evening out the shape of the land.

All vegetation within the area was flattened. Loose pumice and ash deposits formed lahars down all the main rivers.

The eruption further expanded the lake, which had formed after the much larger Oruanui eruption. The previous outlet was blocked, raising the lake 35 m (115 ft) above its present level until it broke out in a huge flood, flowing for more than a week at roughly 200 times the Waikato River's current rate.

Dating the Taupo eruption

Many dates have been given for the Taupo eruption. One estimated date is 181 CE from ice cores in Greenland and Antarctica.[11] It is possible that the meteorological phenomena described by Fan Ye in China and by Herodian in Rome[12] were due to this eruption, which would give a date of exactly 186.[13] However, ash from volcanic activity does not normally cross hemispheres,[14] and radiocarbon dating by R. Sparks has put the date at 233 CE +/- 13 (95% confidence).[15] A 2011 14C wiggle-matching paper gave the date 232 ± 5 CE.[16]

New Zealand was unpopulated at this time, so the nearest humans would have been those in Australia and New Caledonia, more than 2,000 km (1,200 mi) to the west and northwest.

See also

References

  1. Alan Hogg, David J. Lowe, Jonathan Palmer, Gretel Boswijk and Christopher Bronk Ramsey (2011). "Revised calendar date for the Taupo eruption derived by 14C wiggle-matching using a New Zealand kauri 14C calibration data set". The Holocene 22 (4): 439–449. doi:10.1177/0959683611425551. Bibcode2012Holoc..22..439H. 
  2. A continent on the move: New Zealand geoscience into the 21st century. Graham, Ian J. et al.; The Geological Society of New Zealand in association with GNS Science, 2008. ISBN:978-1-877480-00-3. page 66, 168.
  3. "Taupo the volcano" (a single sheet pamphlet), C.J.N. Wilson and B.F. Houghton, Institute of Geological & Nuclear Sciences, c2004.
  4. Information from GNS Science on the Taupo Volcano
  5. Wilson, Colin J. N. (2001). "The 26.5 ka Oruanui eruption, New Zealand: an introduction and overview". Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research 112 (1–4): 133–174. doi:10.1016/S0377-0273(01)00239-6. Bibcode2001JVGR..112..133W. 
  6. Manville, Vern & Wilson, Colin J. N. (2004). "The 26.5 ka Oruanui eruption, New Zealand: a review of the roles of volcanism and climate in the post-eruptive sedimentary response". New Zealand Journal of Geology & Geophysics 47 (3): 525–547. doi:10.1080/00288306.2004.9515074. 
  7. Wilson, Colin J. N. (2006). "The 26.5 ka Oruanui Eruption, Taupō Volcano, New Zealand: Development, Characteristics and Evacuation of a Large Rhyolitic Magma Body". Journal of Petrology 47 (1): 35–69. doi:10.1093/petrology/egi066. Bibcode2005JPet...47...35W. 
  8. "Taupo the eruption" (a single sheet pamphlet), C.J.N. Wilson and B.F. Houghton, Institute of Geological & Nuclear Sciences, c2004.
  9. Wilson, C.J.N. and Walker, G.P.L., 1985. The Taupō eruption, New Zealand I. General aspects. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, A314: 199-228.
  10. Houghton, B.F. (2007). Field Guide - Taupo Volcanic Zone.
  11. Lake Taupo Official Site
  12. Herodian of Antioch. "Chapter 14". History of the Roman Empire. Book 1. http://www.tertullian.org/fathers/herodian_01_book1.htm. "Stars remained visible during the day; other stars, extending to an enormous length, seemed to be hanging in the middle of the sky." 
  13. Barton, John (2001). The First New Zealand Book? — an Eyewitness account of the Taupō eruption of AD 186. New Plymouth: Trustees of the Dalberton Library. ISBN 0-473-08268-3. 
  14. Iridium: tracking down the extraterrestrial element in sedimentary clays New Scientist. 1989. p. 58. https://books.google.com/books?id=G9URSQkDMYgC&q=volcanic+ash+crossing+hemisphere&pg=PA58. 
  15. Sparks, R.J.; Melhuish, W.H.; McKee, J.W.A.; Ogden, J.; Palmer, J.G. (1995). "14C calibration in the Southern Hemisphere and the date of the last Taupō eruption: evidence from tree-ring sequences". Radiocarbon 37 (2): 155–163. doi:10.1017/s0033822200030599. 
  16. Alan Hogg, David J. Lowe, Jonathan Palmer, Gretel Boswijk and Christopher Bronk Ramsey (2011). "Revised calendar date for the Taupo eruption derived by 14C wiggle-matching using a New Zealand kauri 14C calibration data set". The Holocene 22 (4): 439–449. doi:10.1177/0959683611425551. Bibcode2012Holoc..22..439H. 

External links

[ ⚑ ] 38°48′20″S 175°54′03″E / 38.80556°S 175.90083°E / -38.80556; 175.90083