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Magnetotelluric Investigations of the Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii

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Title: Magnetotelluric Investigations of the Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii


1
Magnetotelluric Investigations of the Kilauea
Volcano, Hawaii
  • G. Michael Hoversten1
  • Erika Gasperikova1
  • Greg A. Newman2
  • Jim P. Kauahikaua3
  • 1 Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • 2 Sandia National Laboratories
  • 3 US Geological Survey, Hawaiian Volcano
    Observatory

2
Outline
  • Project Objectives
  • Survey Background
  • The Magnetotelluric method
  • Data Quality
  • Modeling and Inversion
  • Conductivity Structure
  • Conclusions

3
Objectives
  • Produce detailed 3D images of the electrical
    conductivity structure beneath Kilaueas east and
    southwest rift zones
  • use this to infer the location of melt - partial
    melt zones and the structure of the rift systems
  • Push the envelope of large-scale 3D
    Magnetotelluric forward and inverse modeling in
    the presence of rugged topography and coastal
    effects

4
MT Survey Location
Active Vents over the last 20 years
  • 70 80 spatially distributed sites
  • are planned for 3D inversion
  • 33 sites acquired in August 2002
  • Site access on the East Rift Zone
  • is by helicopter
  • Site access in the forest is by foot

5
Magnetotelluric Method
Induction Coil
Covered Electrodes
  • Electromagnetic impedance Z(x,y,f)E(x,y,f)/H(x,y,
    f)
  • function of the earth conductivity structure
  • Magnetic Induction coils measure orthogonal
    magnetic fields
  • 1m long, 20 lb each, 10 lb battery
  • must be buried for wind noise
  • 200 m grounded electric dipoles measure
    orthogonal electric fields
  • Cu-Cu2S electrodes

6500 ft on Mauna Loa
2500 ft on East Rift Zone
6
Data Quality
  • Design recording time 48 hours
  • 36 hours was more common
  • pickup deploy time helicopter schedule
  • Overall quality was good
  • noise in the dead band around 10 sec. period
  • Second phase will aim for 72 hour deployments
  • Frequency range (200 - 0.0002 Hz) translates to
    100 m to 20 km depth sensitivity in models
  • below 0.01 Hz (100 sec) must use 3D to account
    for island effects

Best data at 72 hour recording
Average data at 36 hour recording
7
Modeling and Inversion
  • 3D numerical model of Hawaii surrounding sea
    floor
  • 14 Million cells
  • use 512 nodes on MP cluster
  • 3D topography costal effects depart from 2D
    below 100 sec period
  • 2D inversions use 0.01 to 100 seconds data
  • 3D inversion tests are underway to determine
    optimal grid and domain size
  • extremely computationally intensive (CPU
    memory)
  • 3D is where the data interpretation is going in
    the coming year

8
Modeling and Inversion
  • Sites were grouped into lines for 2D inversion
  • E in-line H perpendicular to line were used for
    inversion (least affected by out-or-plane
    effects)
  • Frequency range used for 2D limited based on 3D
    modeling of topography and coastal effects
  • 0.01 to 100 sec. period
  • depth sensitivity depends on conductivity (5-10
    km)
  • Regularized inversion (smoothing)
  • sharp contrasts bleed into background
  • termination of conductors at depth does not mean
    the structure terminates, just loss of data
    sensitivity

9
Conductivity Structure
  • Depth location of Vp/Vs anomaly (Dawson et al.)
    ties to high conductivity beneath southern
    Kilauea caldera
  • high fracturing and/or partial melt
  • High conductivity zones 2-4 km below surface in
    the east
  • High conductivity zone 1-6 km below surface in
    the west
  • depth sensitivity limited by 100 sec cut off in
    2D inversions

North
10
Conductivity Structure
  • South dipping conductors south of caldera ties to
    low Vp/Vs anomaly
  • deep conductor to 8 km may be expression of
    Summit magma reservoir (Ryan 1988)
  • Deep, high resistivity ties to Haslinger et al.
    high velocity
  • MT (100sec cut) loosing sensitivity at 10km
  • Deep low Vp NE trend from Haslinger et al. ties
    to deep high conductivity zone beneath Puu Oo
  • Depth miss-tie at line intersection
  • this area is at junction of rift zones data is
    more 3D than elsewhere

North
11
Conductivity Structure
  • Deep conductor seen on all western sites around
    Puu Oo appears to dip to the south
  • fading of conductivity with depth is smoothing
    effect of inversion due to loss of information
    (100sec cut)
  • Single site (J30) between east west limits
    information on the connection between East Rift
    and the Caldera area
  • Additional MT sites between East and South-West
    rift will be acquired in 2003

North
J30
12
Conclusions (1)
  • High quality MT data can be acquired on high
    resistivity, recent lava flows
  • use of remote magnetics facilitates data
    collection where access is time weight limited
  • Extreme topographic and oceanland contact
    effects can be modeled in 3D
  • accounted for in 2D inversions by limiting
    frequency range
  • modeled explicitly in 3D inversion
  • 2D inversions of data gt 100 sec period yield
    conductivity structures that tie with published
    velocity models and correlate with recent
    volcanic activity
  • conductivity velocity values indicate shallow
    partial melt zones beneath the south-southwest of
    Kilauea caldera

13
Conclusions (2)
  • A near vertical conductive structure was imaged
    at the approximate location of the summit magma
    reservoir (Ryan 88)
  • use of data below 100 sec in 3D should extend the
    depth images
  • The deep high conductivity zone to the west
    beneath Puu Oo and the active vents is larger
    than expected relative to the conductive zones
    images at the summit magma reservoir
  • this may be an artifact of 2D inversion and/or
    sparse data
  • additional sites in 2003 and further scrutiny
    during 3D inversion and modeling
  • MT offers a tool to complement other geophysics
    for imaging the structure of the volcanic rift
    systems on Kilauea
  • we expect 20 km depth of investigation with
    full data set
  • Future expanded site coverage and 3D inversion
    should provide even better definition of Kilauea
    structures

14
Acknowledgements
  • Support for this work was provided by the U.S.
    Department of Energy under Contract No.
    DE-AC03-76SF00098.
  • We thank Electro Magnetic Instruments for
    contributing 9 prototype MT24 systems, without
    which this work would not have been possible
  • We thank the USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory
    for logistical and personnel support
  • We thank the USGS Menlo Park for financial and
    staff support
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