4.6 Article

Emplacement mechanism of gravity flows inferred from high resolution Lidar data: The 1944 Somma-Vesuvius lava flow (Italy)

Journal

GEOMORPHOLOGY
Volume 95, Issue 3-4, Pages 223-235

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.geomorph.2007.06.005

Keywords

lava flow; gravity flow; Lidar; Digital Terrain Model (DTM); morphometry; emplacement mechanism

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A Digital Terrain Model derived from high resolution Lidar data allows the determination of the morphometric and physical parameters of a lava flow erupted from the Somma-Vesuvius volcano in 1944. The downstrearn variation of morphometric parameters including slope, aspect, relative relief, thickness, width, and cross sectional area is analyzed, and the changes in viscosity, velocity and flow rate are estimated. The aims of the analyses are to recognize different flow surfaces, to reconstruct the flow kinematics, and to obtain information on the mechanism of emplacement. The results indicate that the 1944 lava flow can be divided in three sectors: a near vent sector (NVS) characterized by a toe-like surface, an intermediate sector (IS) with an 'a' atype brittle surface, and a distal sector (DS) with a sheet-like ductile surface. Lateral levees and channels do not occur in NVS, whereas they are well developed in IS. In DS, levees increase with an increasing distance from the vent. Fold-like surfaces occur in NVS and DS, reflecting local shortening processes due to a decrease in the slope of the substratum and overflows from the main channel. IS and DS emplaced between March 18 and 21, 1944, whereas NVS emplaced on March 19 and partly covered IS. The morphometric and physical parameters indicate that IS moved in a 'tube'-like regime, whereas DS emplaced in a 'mobile crust' regime. The IS to DS transition is marked by an increase in velocity and the flow rate, and by a decrease in thickness, width, cross sectional area, and viscosity. This transition is due to an abrupt increase in the slope of the substratum. The estimated velocity values are in good agreement with the measurements during the 1944 eruption. The analysis used here may be extended to other lava flows. Some gravity flows (debris/mud flows, floods, and avalanches) have theological properties and shapes similar to those of lavas, and the same process-form relationships may apply to these flows. The approach used here may be therefore useful for evaluating hazards from various gravity currents. (C) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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