Explainer-Scientists struggle to monitor Tonga volcano after massive
eruption
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[January 17, 2022]
By Kanupriya Kapoor
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Scientists are
struggling to monitor an active volcano that erupted off the South
Pacific island of Tonga at the weekend, after the explosion destroyed
its sea-level crater and drowned its mass, obscuring it from satellites.
The eruption of Hunga-Tonga-Hunga-Ha'apai volcano, which sits on the
seismically active Pacific Ring of Fire, sent tsunami waves across the
Pacific Ocean and was heard some 2,300 kms (1,430 miles) away in New
Zealand.
"The concern at the moment is how little information we have and that's
scary," said Janine Krippner, a New Zealand-based volcanologist with the
Smithsonian Global Volcanism Program.
"When the vent is below water, nothing can tell us what will happen
next."
Krippner said on-site instruments were likely destroyed in the eruption
and the volcanology community was pooling together the best available
data and expertise to review the explosion and predict anticipated
future activity.
Saturday's eruption was so powerful that space satellites captured not
only huge clouds of ash but also an atmospheric shockwave that radiated
out from the volcano at close to the speed of sound.
Photographs and videos showed grey ash clouds billowing over the South
Pacific and metre-high waves surging onto the coast of Tonga.
There are no official reports of injuries or deaths in Tonga yet but
internet and telephone communications are extremely limited and outlying
coastal areas remain cut off.
Experts said the volcano, which last erupted in 2014, had been puffing
away for about a month before rising magma, superheated to around 1,000
degrees Celsius, met with 20-degree seawater on Saturday, causing an
instantaneous and massive explosion.
The unusual "astounding" speed and force of the eruption indicated a
greater force at play than simply magma meeting water, scientists said.
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A plume rises over Tonga when the underwater volcano Hunga Tonga-Hunga
Ha'apai erupted in this satellite image taken by Himawari-8, a
Japanese weather satellite operated by Japan Meteorological Agency,
on January 15, 2022 and released by National Institute of
Information and Communications Technology (NICT) and obtained by
Reuters on January 16, 2022. National Institute of Information and
Communications Technology (NICT)/Handout via REUTERS
As the superheated magma rose
quickly and met the cool seawater, so did a huge volume of volcanic
gases, intensifying the explosion, said Raymond Cas, a professor of
volcanology at Australia's Monash University.
Some volcanologists are likening the eruption to the 1991 Pinatubo
eruption in the Philippines, the second-largest volcanic eruption of
the 20th century, which killed around 800 people.
The Tonga Geological Services agency, which was monitoring the
volcano, was unreachable on Monday. Most communications to Tonga
have been cut after the main undersea communications cable lost
power.
LIGHTNING STRIKES
American meteorologist, Chris Vagasky, studied lightning around the
volcano and found it increasing to about 30,000 strikes in the days
leading up to the eruption. On the day of the eruption, he detected
400,000 lightning events in just three hours, which comes down to
100 lightning events per second.
That compared with 8,000 strikes per hour during the Anak Krakatau
eruption in 2018, caused part of the crater to collapse into the
Sunda Strait and send a tsunami crashing into western Java, which
killed hundreds of people.
Cas said it is difficult to predict follow-up activity and that the
volcano's vents could continue to release gases and other material
for weeks or months.
"It wouldn't be unusual to get a few more eruptions, though maybe
not as big as Saturday," he said. "Once the volcano is de-gassed, it
will settle down."
(Reporting by Kanupriya Kapoor; Editing by Jane Wardell and Michael
Perry)
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