Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9716435 | International Journal of Rock Mechanics and Mining Sciences | 2005 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
At low pressure (0-10 MPa), the P-wave velocity of the columnar Seljadur basalt was 5.4 km/s, while for the Etnean lava flow basalt it was only 3.0-3.5 km/s. On increasing the pressure to 80 MPa, the velocity of Etnean basalt increased by 45%-60%, whereas that of Seljadur basalt increased by less than 2%. Furthermore, the velocity of Seljadur basalt thermally stressed to 900 °C fell by about 2.0 km/s, whereas the decrease for Etnean basalt was negligible. A similar pattern was observed in the permeability data. Permeability of Etnean basalt fell from about 7.5Ã10â16 m2 to about 1.5Ã10â16 m2 over the pressure range 5-80 MPa, while that for Seljadur basalt varied little from its initial low value of 9Ã10â21 m2. Again, thermal stressing significantly increased the permeability of Seljadur basalt, whilst having a negligible effect on the Etnean basalt. These results clearly indicate that the Etnean basalt contains a much higher level of crack damage than the Seljadur basalt, and hence can explain the low velocities (3-4 km/s) generally inferred from seismic tomography for the Mt. Etna volcanic edifice.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology
Authors
S. Vinciguerra, C. Trovato, P.G. Meredith, P.M. Benson,