Seismic image of a CO2 reservoir beneath a seismically active volcano

Geophysical Journal International
By: , and 

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Abstract

Mammoth Mountain is a seismically active volcano 200 000 to 50 000 years old, situated on the southwestern rim of Long Valley caldera, California. Since 1989 it has shown evidence of unrest in the form of earthquake swarms (Hill et al. 1990), volcanic ‘long-period’ earthquakes (Pitt & Hill 1994), increased output of magmatic 3 He (Sorey et al. 1993) and the emission of about 500 tonnes day −1 of CO 2 (Farrar et al. 1995; Hill 1996; M. Sorey, personal communication, 1997), which has killed trees and poses a threat to human safety. Local-earthquake tomography shows that in mid-1989 areas of subsequent tree-kill were underlain by extensive regions where the ratio of the compressional and shear elastic-wave speeds V P /V S was about 9 per cent lower than in the surrounding rocks. Theory (Mavko & Mukerji 1995), experiment (Ito, DeVilbiss & Nur 1979), and experience at other geothermal/volcanic areas (Julian et al. 1996) and at petroleum reservoirs (Harris et al. 1996) indicate that V P /V S is sensitive to pore-fluid compressibility, through its effect on V P . The observed V P /V S anomaly is probably caused directly by CO 2 , and seismic V P /V S tomography is thus a promising tool for monitoring gas concentration and movement in volcanoes, which may in turn be related to volcanic activity.
Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Seismic image of a CO2 reservoir beneath a seismically active volcano
Series title Geophysical Journal International
DOI 10.1046/j.1365-246X.1998.1331540.x
Volume 133
Issue 1
Year Published 1998
Language English
Publisher IEEE
Description 4 p.
First page F7
Last page F10
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