Magmatic plumbing and dynamic evolution of the 2021 La Palma eruption.
Carmen Del FresnoSimone CescaAndreas KlügelItahiza Domínguez CerdeñaEduardo A Díaz-SuárezTorsten DahmLaura García-CañadaStavros MeletlidisClaus MilkereitCarla Valenzuela-MalebránRubén López-DíazCarmen LópezPublished in: Nature communications (2023)
The 2021 volcanic eruption at La Palma, Canary Islands, was the island's most voluminous historical eruption. Little is known about this volcano's feeding system. During the eruption, seismicity was distributed in two clusters at ~10-14 km and ~33-39 km depth, separated by an aseismic zone. This gap coincides with the location of weak seismic swarms in 2017-2021 and where petrological data have implied pre-eruptive magma storage. Here we use seismological methods to understand the seismic response to magma transfer, with 8,488 hypocentral relocations resolving small-scale seismogenic structures, and 156 moment tensors identifying stress heterogeneities and principal axes flips. Results suggest a long-lasting preparatory stage with the progressive destabilisation of an intermediate, mushy reservoir, and a co-eruptive stage with seismicity controlled by the drainage and interplay of two localised reservoirs. Our study provides new insights into the plumbing system that will improve the monitoring of future eruptions in the island.