The findings are published in Scientific Reports by Helen Janiszewski, recently of Carnegie, now at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, and Carnegie’s Lara Wagner and Diana Roman.
Arc volcanoes like Cleveland form over plate boundaries where one tectonic plate slides beneath another. They are linked to the Earth’s mantle by complex subsurface structures that cross the full thickness of the planet's crust. These structures are more complex than the large chambers of molten rock that resemble a textbook illustration of a volcano. Rather, they comprise an interlaced array of solid rock and a “mushy” mix of partially molten rock and solid crystals.
Resolving this subterranean architecture is crucial for emergency planning and saving human lives. But these regions have been difficult to image.
Since it’s impossible for humans to directly observe the depths of our planet’s interior, scientists need instruments to help them visualize what’s happening down there. Traditionally, a variety of geophysical and geochemical approaches are deployed to determine the structures that exist beneath a volcano.
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