Browsing by Author "Gómez-Ballesteros M"
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- ItemFormation of Stanley Patch volcanic cone: New insights into the evolution of Deception Island caldera (Antarctica)(Elsevier B.V., 2021-05-06) Hopfenblatt J; Geyer A; Aulinas M; Álvarez-Valero AM; Gisbert G; Kereszturi G; Ercilla G; Gómez-Ballesteros M; Márquez A; García-Castellanos D; Pedrazzi D; Sumino H; Höskuldsson A; Giralt S; Angulo-Preckler CDeception Island (South Shetland Islands) is one of the most active volcanoes in Antarctica, with more than 20 explosive eruptive events registered over the past centuries. Recent eruptions (1967, 1969, and 1970) and volcanic unrest episodes (1992, 1999, and 2014–2015) demonstrate that volcanic activity is likely occurring in the future. This is of special concern for scientists, logistic personnel, and tourists, since the South Shetland Islands are an important tourist destination and host numerous year-round and seasonal scientific stations and base camps. Significant efforts have been made to understand the complex magmatic and volcanic evolution of Deception Island with special interest on its subaerial part. However, studies on submerged volcanic cones within Port Foster, the sea-flooded part of Deception Island's caldera depression, are comparatively scarce. Here, we provide a full characterization of Stanley Patch volcano, the largest of these volcanic edifices. Estimated morphometric parameters based on new multibeam bathymetric data, supported by petrographic and chemical observations from rock samples collected on the crater rim, reveal that Stanley Patch volcano grew in a subaerial environment. This result, combined with previous findings and new sedimentological evidence from our ultra-high resolution seismic profiles, allow to further detail the island's geologic evolution since the caldera collapse. We conclude that the complete flooding of Port Foster could have only occurred after the formation of Stanley Patch volcano, i.e. during the last ~2000 years, and in a time period of a few days or less.
- ItemVolcanism and rapid sedimentation affect the benthic communities of Deception Island, Antarctica(Elsevier B.V., 2021-05-01) Angulo-Preckler C; Pernet P; García-Hernández C; Kereszturi G; Álvarez-Valero AM; Hopfenblatt J; Gómez-Ballesteros M; Otero XL; Caza J; Ruiz-Fernández J; Geyer A; Avila CDeception Island is amongst the most active volcanoes in the Southern Ocean, with over 20 explosive eruptions in the last ca. 200 years. The eruption that formed the caldera at Deception Island occurred 3980 ± 125 calendar years Before Present, and it is the largest eruptive event documented in Antarctica during Holocene. Since then, post-caldera volcanic activity has comprised many scattered eruptive vents across the island. Mortality of benthic organisms has been reported during the most recent eruptions occurred on the island, in 1967, 1969, and 1970 Common Era (CE), with very low abundances of organisms during the 1967–1973 CE period. Within the sea-flooded part of the caldera depression, named Port Foster, a submarine volcanic axis with several volcanic cones is observed. An interdisciplinary team sampled the best morphologically preserved volcanic edifice within Port Foster, the so-called Stanley Patch. Geophysical data traced the volcano and characterized its morphology and inner structure. Underwater scuba sampling allowed to acquire sediment and rock samples, photographs and video images of the benthic organisms and seascape. Morphology of Stanley Patch cone and textural characteristics of the collected pyroclastic rocks indicate that the volcanic edifice was originated during an explosive eruption. Furthermore, the lack of palagonitization, quenched pyroclast margins, and hyaloclastite deposits indicate that this cone has formed on-land, before the caldera floor became inundated by the seawater, highlighting the complex intra-caldera evolution of Deception Island. A sediment core from the crater was collected for sedimentological, and geochemical analysis. Antarctic climate and seasonal sea ice, together with organic degradation due to high sedimentation rates, explain the low total organic carbon data measured. The volcanic history of the island has probably avoided the development of a stable benthic community over time, similar to other Antarctic shallow communities. Moreover, the current geomorphological conditions still shape different benthic communities than in the surrounding coastal ecosystems. Stanley Patch, and the whole Port Foster, provide a natural laboratory for benchmarking the reestablishment of benthic communities on a volcanic-influenced shallow marine environment, offering relevant data for future studies evaluating global climate change effects on the Antarctic seabed.
