Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 37

Earth-Science Reviews 47 Ž1999.

95–131
www.elsevier.comrlocaterearscirev

Volcanic geomorphology—an overview


)
J.-C. Thouret
´
IRD— Institut de Recherche pour le DeÕeloppement (UR 6) and Centre de Recherches Volcanologiques, UMR 6524 CNRS Magmas et
Volcans, UniÕersite´ Blaise Pascal, Clermont-Ferrand, France
Received 13 August 1998; accepted 17 February 1999

Abstract

The review examines the role of geomorphology in analyzing the volcanoes on Earth. Five objectives are stressed. First,
classifications of volcanic landforms should be improved to take care of the complexity in volcanic landform generation as
magmatic systems, style of eruption, and the erupted material all influence the morphology. Second, geomorphology should
contribute to the science of volcanology through its capability in reconstructing growth ‘stages’ in complex volcanoes, and
also in analyzing the structural factors which contribute to the catastrophic collapse of volcanoes. Third, geomorphology can
contribute to physical volcanology by assessing the effects of topography on transport, erosion, and deposition of
volcanogenic flows and identifying the sources and climaticrtectonic conditions which govern the emplacement of
volcaniclastic deposits. Fourth, volcanic geomorphology Ža. identifies sedimentary facies associations, Žb. constructs facies
models for dynamic volcano delivery systems, and Žc. analyzes the characteristics of sediment gravity flows in order to
determine relevant parameters for modelling their behaviour. Fifth, process-oriented geomorphology is critical in developing
accurate methods for measuring rates of geomorphic processes that shape ephemeral volcanic constructs, and for evaluating
and comparing geomorphic impacts on disturbed catchments and the related hydrologic response before, during, and after
eruptions. This should help to refine parameters for the exponential decay model. Finally, volcanic geomorphology is
essential for risk assessment through geomorphic hazard zonation and composite risk zonation. Such treatments are
necessary in order to face the enhanced challenge posed by the combination of natural hazards and the increasing number of
people who are at risk around volcanoes. q 1999 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

Keywords: volcano growth; landforms; tectonics; debris avalanches; volcaniclastic sediments; denudation rate

1. Introduction the succession in which it is intercalated. Volcanic


landforms, in contrast to other types of landforms,
Volcanism directly creates and degrades land- result from both constructiÕe and destructiÕe forces
forms, and indirectly provides an age for both the near-simultaneously. Hence, volcanic landforms need
landsurface over which the erupted material lies and to be studied carefully regarding their processes of
growth and erosion. In contrast to erosional land-
) forms in rocks surviving for long periods of time,
´
Instituto Geofısico ´ Calle Calatrava 216, Urb. Camino
del Peru,
Real, La Molina, Lima 12, Peru. Fax: q51-14-368-437; E-mail: volcanoes usually have a short-term existence, but
jct@geo.igp.gob.pe volcanic geomorphology enables us to Ž1. recon-

0012-8252r99r$ - see front matter q 1999 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
PII: S 0 0 1 2 - 8 2 5 2 Ž 9 9 . 0 0 0 1 4 - 8
96 J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131

struct original forms even after significant erosion Francis, 1993.. However, many rapidly constructed
has occurred, Ž2. estimate growth and denudation volcanic landforms are not volcanoes at all, such as
rates based on geochronology and reconstruction flood basalt, continental or submarine plateaus, and
techniques, and Ž3. compare the effects of climate on ignimbrite sheets from large calderas.
the nature and rate of denudation. The last one is
useful for understanding similar volcanic landforms
and rocks found over a wide range of climates. 2.1.1. Classification of Õolcanoes and related land-
We present a series of research themes in volcanic forms
geomorphology which stem from a review of papers Ža. Monogenetic landforms and fields:
recently published both in volcanology and geomor- -cinder or scoria cones, ŽSurtseyan. tuff cones, and
phology. Knowledge of volcanology and tools such ŽTaalian. tuff rings,
as DEM, GIS, and airborne imagery have expanded -maars Žsubaqueous and subaerial. and diatremes,
at an unprecedented rate over the past 20 years. We -intra- or subglacial volcanoes: tuyas Žtable moun-
intend to: Ž1. reappraise, on the basis of new tools tains. and mobergs,
and methods, the terrestrial and marine landforms -endogenous and exogenous domes,
generated by volcanic activity, Ž2. analyze the inter- -lava flows and fields, including small-scale lava-
play of construction and denudation processes flow forms,
throughout eruptive activity in a variety of structural -continental flood basalts and plains basalt
and climatic settings, and Ž3. measure erosion pro- provinces,
cesses acting on volcanoes and response of water- -ash flows and ignimbrite sheets, plains, and
sheds disturbed by substantial eruptions. plateaus.
Žb. Polygenetic Õolcanoes and calderas:
-stratovolcanoes: simple with summit crater, com-
2. Significance of volcanic geomorphology posite with sector collapse scar andror a caldera;
compound or multiple volcanoes,
-intermediate-silicic multivent centres that lack a
The significance of Volcanic Geomorphology can
central cone; rhyolithic centres; silicic volcanic
be amplified through Ža. the improvement of the
lava field with multiple domes and calderas,
quantitative classification of volcanic landforms,
-calderas types: explosion Žsomma., collapse-ex-
which blends morphometry and studies based on
plosion ŽKrakatoa., collapse on Hawaiian shield
ground observations, remote sensing data, and labo-
volcano, collapse in basement and resurgent
ratory experiments, and Žb. the diversified use of
caldera ŽValles., large and complex resurgent
airborne images and digital data acquired through
calderas ŽToba.,
radar and satellites, and combined with DEM’s data,
-volcano-tectonic depressions termed ‘inverse vol-
to facilitate the morphological analysis of volcanoes.
canoes’ ŽTaupo Volcanic Zone..
Žc. Shield Õolcanoes:
2.1. ImproÕement of classification of Õolcanoes and -Hawaiian shields and domes; Galapagos, Ice-
related landforms landic, and scutulum-type shields.
Žd. Volcanic landforms resulting from eruptiÕe
Classical classifications of volcanic landforms are and r or erosional processes:
based on types of activity, magmas, and erupted -avalanche caldera from a flank failure of mag-
products Že.g., Cotton, 1944; Macdonald, 1972.. Im- matic, gravitational, or mixed origin,
proved classifications should also be based on geo- -erosional calderas Že.g., Haleakala, Maui; La
morphic scale, constructional vs. erosional origin, ´
Reunion cirques..
mono- vs. polygenesis, types of activity, and type Že. Volcanic landforms resulting from denudation
and volume of magma and erupted material. Here- and inÕersion of relief:
after, we distinguish six main types of volcanic -eroded cone; eroded pyroclastic-flow deposit and
constructs and erosional landforms Že.g., Ollier, 1988; sheet,
J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131 97

-inverted small-scale forms: necks, culots, dykes, 2.2. Why do we need to improÕe existing classifica-
-eroded lava flow, inverted relief and planeze ` tions?
Že.g., Pain, 1995; Ollier, 1995.,
-roots of paleo-volcano, cauldron, and hypovol- 2.2.1. SeÕeral examples illustrate the pitfalls of clas-
canic complex. sical classifications
Žf. Morphological changes in Õolcanic-surround The classification of tuff cones and tuff rings, for
ing landscapes: example, has been based on effects of explosive
-volcano construct and induced change in drainage magma–water interactions on morphology Že.g., Cas
pattern at a regional scale and Wright, 1987.: tuff rings and tuff cones are
-drainage blockage, avulsion, impoundment and thought to result from relatively dry and wet erup-
lake-breakout, etc. tions, respectively, which are related to low and high

Fig. 1. After Sohn, 1996 Žhis fig. 4, modified, caption modified.. ŽA. Diagram of water–magma ŽWrM . ratio vs. explosion energy. Four
fields of hydrovolcanic eruption styles are arranged in a line along the X-axis, according to the assumption that the WrM ratio is the sole
controlling factor of hydrovolcanism. This model turns out to be flawed. ŽB. An alternative model in which each field of eruption styles
occupies varying parts of the hydrovolcanic field depending on fundamental controls. According to this model, different styles of eruption
with the same WrM ratio are possible, and an eruption may show only Taalian or Surtseyan characteristics even when it involves the full
gamut of high to low WrM ratios. Evolution paths of each tuff ring and cone, represented by thick arrows, are superimposed on the
diagrams. Reproduced with the kind permission to use material copyrighted by the Geological Society of America Žnumber 21569..
98 J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131

mixing ratios of water to magma. Sohn Ž1996. has by an exceptionally large tuff cone surrounding a
challenged this prevailing model for tuff rings and 12-km-wide summit caldera. The tuff cone may be
tuff cones in South Korea ŽFig. 1., arguing that the considered as mainly basaltic. Interpretation of the
morphological variations are directly caused by de- tuff series implies intervention of external water and
positional processes Žpyroclastic-surge dominated in suggests both explosive and collapse mechanisms for
tuff rings and fallout-dominated in tuff cones., irre- this non-classical type of caldera formation at a
spective of water–magma mixing ratios. The deposi- basaltic volcano.
tional processes are interpreted to be in turn con- In addition, we need to improve the classification
trolled by a number of fundamental controls, which to understand magmatic systems and achieve hazard
include depositional settings, type, level, and lithol- assessments of the activity of a young volcano. One
ogy of aquifers, strength of country rocks, ground- example stems from the study of Cerro Negro vol-
water behavior, and properties and behavior of cano, Nicaragua: McKnight and Williams Ž1997.
magma. These controls determine the explosion ŽFig. 2, Table 1. indicate that criteria of age and size
depth, conduit geometry, mode of magma–water that are usually used for this assessment are not
interaction, magnitude of explosion, eruption-column adequate for active, young volcanoes. This question
behavior, and subsequent depositional processes. bears on the fact that hazard assessment of the
current activity of Cerro Negro depends heavily on
the morphological type of volcano. Other criteria on
2.2.2. Existing classifications face increasing com- which that determination can be based are magma
plexity in landform generation production rates, cone morphology, and eruption
Several examples illustrate the coexistence of sev- style.
eral eruption styles and eruptive sequences within
the lifetime of a complex volcano, and the contribu-
tion of several mechanisms to caldera formation. For 2.3. How can we improÕe existing classifications?
instance, giant tuff cones and calderas were de-
scribed in arc volcanoes, such as the Ambrym caldera Detailed research has been undertaken over the
and tuff cone, Vanuatu ŽRobin et al., 1993.. Previ- recent years on volcanic landforms and on the mor-
ously considered as an effusive basaltic volcano, phology of lava flows, in terms of morphometry,
Ambrym consists of a basal shield volcano topped comparative morphology, and processes, based on

Fig. 2. From McKnight and Williams, 1997 Žtheir figs. 4 and 5.. ŽA. Cumulative volume over age of volcano. Eruptivity rates Žer. are
shown. Solid line represents period 1850–1919; dashed line depicts time since 1923. ŽB. Crater and cone widths of Cerro Negro, determined
from historical accounts and photographs. Dashed line is trend for cinder cones; solid line is trend for composite volcanoes.
J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131 99

Table 1
Summary of comparisons of cinder cones and composite volcanoes Žfrom McKnight and Williams, 1997, their table 2.
Volcano Eruptivity Crater widthr Eruption Total Pyrocl. vol.r Cone Eruption Column
Žkm3rka. cone width style Žvol. km3 . total vol. height rate height
ratio DRE Ž%. Žkm. Žkgrs. Žkm.
Paricutin 0.12 0.31 St 2.1 67 0.42 10 1 –10 4 0.1–6.0
Jorullo 0.12 0.25 St, V ; 2.0 ; 60 0.35 n.d. n.d.
Cerro Negro 1.6 0.08–0.36 St, V, Sp 0.22 77 0.25 10 3 –10 5 0.1–8.0
Izalco 8.8 0.07 St, V 2.1 ; 18 0.65 10 3a F Plinian
Arenal 1.3 0.06 St, V, Sp, P 5.0 ; 20 1.10 10 4 –10 5b F Plinian
Strombolian n.d. n.d. St – 1–20 – 10 1 –10 6 0.1–5

St s Strombolian, V s vulcanian, Sp s sub-Plinian, P s Plinian, n.d.s no data, DRE s dense rock equivalent.
Data references: Paricutin—Foshag and Gonzalez Ž1956., Fries Ž1953.; Jorullo—Luhr and Carmichael Ž1985.; Cerro Negro—McKnight
Ž1995.; Izalco—Rose and Stoiber Ž1969., Mooser et al. Ž1956.; Arenal—Wadge Ž1983., Borgia et al. Ž1988.; Strombolian—Wood Ž1980..
Production rate data from Hasenaka and Carmichael Ž1985. and Wadge Ž1982..
a
Calculated from Rose and Stoiber Ž1969. for the 1966 eruption only.
b
Calculated from Wadge Ž1983. for the 1968–1980 eruption only.

remote sensing, ground-based observations, and lab- infer the chemical and physical properties of the
oratory experiments. surface materials and to map lava flows. For exam-
ple, the Mauna Loa lava flows were mapped in great
2.3.1. Recent results acquired on large-scale land- detail ŽKahle et al., 1995; Kauahikau et al., 1995.
forms using NASA’S TIMS and Space Shuttle radar SIR.
Shield volcanoes, for example, have been the Lava flows can be followed up and mapped using
focus of recent morphological studies on size, distri- data obtained from the spaceborne advanced very
bution, and magma output rate ŽMexican shield vol- high resolution radiometer ŽAVHRR., whose quanti-
canoes: Hasenaka, 1994., and on morphology and tative analysis allows estimation of active lava area,
mechanism of eruptions ŽIcelandic shield volcanoes: thermal flux, effusion rates, and total flow field
Rossi, 1996.. Additional results, acquired on smaller volume. Estimates of eruption rate and total flow
landforms, such as dome origin and behaviour, illus- field volume of the 1991–1993 Mount Etna effusive
trate the evolution from a descriptive approach eruption ŽHarris et al., 1997. are in agreement with
ŽScarth, 1994. to a semi-quantitative approach published ground-based estimates of 5.8 m3 sy1 and
ŽBlake, 1990.. 235 = 10 6 m3 ŽCalvari et al., 1994; Tanguy et al.,
1996.. Stevens et al. Ž1997. carried out a more
2.3.2. Detailed morphology of laÕa flows accurate estimate of the 1991–1993 lava-flow vol-
Recent studies on lava flows have been based on ume Ž231 " 29 = 10 6 m3 ., using EDM-based field
three approaches: fieldwork and morphometry, re- survey of the surface of the lava-flow field and one
mote sensing, and laboratory experiments. panchromatic SPOT image. The results were digi-
Ža. Ground observations and quantitative, compar- tised, interpolated and converted into a DEM, con-
ative morphology have beeen carried out on ice- structed from a 1:25,000 contour map of the area.
landic lava flows and small-scale landforms on lava Digital elevation data from TOPSAR, an airborne
flows ŽRossi and Gudmundsson, 1996.. synthetic aperture radar system that uses interferome-
Žb. Remote sensing helps to outline lava flows try to derive topography, were used by Rowland
and detail lava-flow morphology using spaceborne Ž1996. ŽFig. 3A,B. to determine slope distributions,
Radar images ŽTOPSAR, SIR-C radar., satellite im- proportions of lava flows and vents, and lava flow
ages ŽLandsat TM, SPOT., and photographic data. thicknesses and volumes on Fernandina Volcano,
Digital multispectral data such as the thermal in- Galapagos Islands. The concentration of vents on the
frared multispectral scanner ŽTIMS. images help to summit platform, five to eight times as much as on
100 J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131

Fig. 3. After Rowland, 1996, Žhis figs. 7 and 9, modified, caption modified.. ŽA. Vent map superimposed on a shaded relief image. Vents
are mapped from SPOT and TOPSAR data. An attempt was made to draw the symbol at each vent location to match the extent of the actual
pyroclastic construct, but for some of the narrower arcuate fissures the pyroclastic deposit is less distinct than the mapped symbol. Note the
strong differentiation of vents into arcuate and radial categories. Note also that the distribution of radial vents is not uniform. Dotted circle
Žcentered on the caldera. includes 95% of all radial vents and has a radius of 13 km. ŽB. Graph of young vent elevation versus distance from
the center of the volcano, differentiating vents by their orientation, volume of lava produced, and type of lava produced. Note that radial
vents have produced the largest volume of lava, and that pahoehoe has been preferentially produced at, or within 3 km of, the base of the
steep slopes. This graph approximates a radially averaged topographic profile with a vertical exaggeration of ; 4 = . There are fewer circles
than young flows because some vents have been buried and because there are young flows for which vents cannot be identified. Reproduced
with the kind permission of American Geological Union ŽJournal of Geophysical Research, 1996, 101ŽB12., 27657–27672..
J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131 101

coastal plain and apron, supports previously pro- Žb. The topographic features known as abyssal
posed mechanisms for producing higher elevations hills Žtypically 10–20 km long, 2–5 km wide, 50–300
and steeper slopes in the central part of the volcano. m high, and oriented approximately perpendicular to
Žc. Laboratory simulations and comparative mor- the spreading direction., characterize ) 30% of the
phology have been carried out to reproduce mor- ocean floor ŽMacdonald et al., 1996., being the most
phologies observed on the sea floor. Using labora- abundant geomorphic structures on Earth. Sub-
tory simulations, Gregg and Fink Ž1995. were able to mersible-based investigations show that Pacific
reproduce submarine flow morphologies commonly abyssal hills are created on the East Pacific Rise as
observed on the sea floor, typically classified as horsts and grabens which lengthen with time. Hills
pillowed, lobate, or sheet flows, while monitoring are bounded on one side by ridge-facing scarps
the physical conditions under which they form. Four produced by normal faulting, and on the other by
submarine lava-flow morphologies are considered to more gentle slopes produced by volcanic growth
be diagnostic of specific effusion rates: jumbled, faulting.
folded, and lineated sheets, and striated pillows. Seamounts ŽCarlowicz, 1996; Smith et al., 1997.,
guyots ŽSmoot and King, 1993; Smoot, 1995., and
2.3.3. A wealth of Õolcanic landforms on ocean shoaling volcanoes ŽMcPhie, 1995. play a significant
floors role in crustal construction and in constructional-ero-
Recent investigations confirm that the ocean sional processes. Seamounts play a significant role in
floors, in particular the mid-ocean ridges, are home crustal construction at the mid-oceanic ridges, at
to over 60% of the Earth’s volcanoes. Investigations least in the slow-spreading ridges such as MAR.
of oceanic ridges have emphasized the fast-spreading Spreading segments contain a prominent axial vol-
East Pacific Ridge, the medium-spreading Juan de canic ridge. Ridges are composed of piled up
Fuca Ridge, the slow-spreading Mid-Atlantic Ridge, seamounts and hummocky flows, and are interpreted
and the super slow-spreading SW Indian Ridge. Vol- as the primary sites of crustal construction. Small
canic constructs include axial topographic highs, magma pockets with slow eruption rate produce
abyssal hills, and seamount populations which show seamounts; small magma bodies with somewhat
a spatial density and characteristic height in accor- higher eruption rates produce hummocky fissure fed
dance with the spreading rate ŽSmith and Cann, flows.
1992; Mendel and Sauter, 1997..
Ža. Based on swath bathymetric coverage com- 2.4. Geodynamic and tectonic settings of Õolcanic
bined with high-resolution side-scan images, the constructs
three-dimensional perspective view of the axis of the The passage of magma through the crust and
slow-spreading Mid-Atlantic Ridge ŽSmith et al., lithosphere is controlled by crustal lithospheric
1997., shows volcanic constructs and faults similar stress-field and local stress-field configurations, and
in size and shape to those observed at subaerial rift resultant fractures, i.e., normal faulting, thrust fault-
zones such as Hawaı¨ and Iceland. The overall shape ing, and strike–slip faulting ŽCas and Wright, 1987..
of the axial zone is that of a major graben composed
of an inner valley floor and bordered by valley walls 2.4.1. Tectonic effects on Õolcano and caldera loca-
along normal faults. The inner valley floor is the tion, morphology, and formation
primary site of crustal construction, and most seg- To show the relationships between volcanic com-
ments contain large axial volcanic ridges within their plexes or caldera location, morphology, and tecton-
valley floors that are the principal sites of lava ics, three approaches have been undertaken Ž1. on a
extrusion: seamounts, hummocks, fissures, and morphotectonic basis, Ž2. on structural and remote
smooth flows. Axial volcanic ridges range in size up sensing data Že.g., shape and formation of large
to several hundreds of meters high, 1.5 km wide, and calderas., and Ž3. more recently, on laboratory exper-
several to tens of kilometers long. Small Ž50 - h - iments and modelling.
300 m. near-circular seamounts are distributed over Classical morphotectonic studies include the sta-
the valley floors. tistical analysis of the geometry of drainage patterns
102 J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131

and stream directions controlled by tectonics and the asthenosphere. As much as a half or two-thirds of the
identification of morphotectonic features. For exam- build-up of the volcanoes of Hawaı¨ may be offset by
ple, the main morphological characters of volcanic
complexes of Latium in Italy ŽBuonasorte et al.,
1991; Trigila, 1995. are strongly controlled by four
prevailing tectonic directions for Vulsini, and three
for the Sabatini and Colli Albani areas. These studies
allow us to infer where and how the structural setting
of the sedimentary units and the recent tectonic
activity of the area ‘control’ the location and shape
of the calderas.
The influence of the structural framework on the
shape and the formation of large caldera complexes
has been inferred from remote sensing and ground-
based structural analysis. Based on 2D-images pro-
duced by draping SPOT satellite images over a
DEM, the relationships between the geodynamic set-
ting, the regional faults, and the calderas of Toba and
Tondano ŽIndonesia. are described in terms of evolu-
tion in a pull-apart basin ŽLecuyer et al., 1997.. The
links between the main morphologic and structural
features on the submerged portions of volcanic edi-
fices such as Panarea, Stromboli in the Aeolian
Islands ŽGabbianelli et al., 1993., have been carried
out through electroacoustic and high resolution seis-
mic profiles in the SE Tyrrhenian sea. Both com-
plexes show a preferential development along NE–
SW lineaments, which coincides with the regional
structural trend of this sector of the Aeolian struc-
ture. Faulting, caldera collapse, and tectonic tilting
were interrelated and fundamentally influenced by
activation of the NE–SW fractures.

2.4.2. Volcanic constructs can influence their tec-


tonic setting and magmatic system
Ža. Volcano building on thin oceanic lithosphere
causes the lithosphere to sag downward into the

Fig. 4. From Van Wyk de Vries and Merle, 1996 Žtheir fig. 1,
caption modified.. Examples of influence of volcanoes on fault-
ing. ŽA. Fieale volcano, showing inward-curving faults. ŽB. Axial
and Brown Bear seamounts, showing Juan de Fuca Ridge curving
into volcanoes. BBB, Brown Bear basin; HB, Helium basin. ŽC.
Maderas volcano. Thick lines indicate major faults. This volcano
spreads and rifts predominantly normal to regional extension
Žindicated by arrows.. Shaded areas indicate upper part of each
volcano. Contours are in metres. Reproduced with the kind per-
mission of the Geological Society of America ŽGSA Copyright
permission number 21569..
J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131 103

lithospheric subsidence ŽPeterson and Moore, 1987; struction, thus contributing to the understanding of
Lipman, 1995.. processes of building and destruction of volcanic
Žb. The tectonic effect of volcanic constructs on edifices, and Žc. analyze the structural factors which
faulting has been tested through laboratory experi- contribute to the catastrophic collapse of volcanoes.
ments and modelling. The effect of volcanic con-
struct on rift fault patterns ŽVan Wyk de Vries and 3.1. Growth and destruction–denudation of Õolca-
Merle, 1996; Fig. 4. is exemplified in three cases: noes
Fieale volcano ŽAsal Rift, Djibouti., Axial and Brown
Bear seamounts ŽJuan de Fuca Ridge., and Maderas Growth and destruction of volcanoes are the result
volcano ŽNicaragua.. Analogue models show that of the complex interplay of endogenous and exoge-
increased fault throw as the volcano is approached is nous processes. One of the major tasks of volcanic
caused by an interaction of the regional stress field geomorphology is to reconstruct the volcanic land-
with that set up by the volcano mass. For faults to be scape and landform history, in order to Ž1. unravel
reoriented there must be a ductile layer below the the building and destruction stages and processes,
volcano Žhot crust at mid-ocean ridge, weak sedi- and Ž2. calculate long- and short-term growth and
mentary strata, etc... Increased volcano mass and denudation rates over time, in response to eruptive
size and lower brittlerductile ratios lead to increased style, tectonic uplift or spreading, climate, and sea-
fault curvature. Volcanoes on one side of a rift may level change.
capture the fault, forming the axis of a new rift. By
concentrating extension, magma is more easily 3.1.1. Rapid processes and rates of growth and
erupted. A positive feedback between increased ex- destruction of Õolcanic constructs
tension and magma eruption rate will lead to rift Unlike ordinary mountains, which are formed by
narrowing, which can favor the formation of oceanic slow uplift and erosion, volcanoes are constructed
crust ŽVan Wyk de Vries and Merle, 1996.. rapidly.
Žc. Conversely, volcanic constructs and gradual
volcano spreading influence faulting and rifting 3.1.1.1. Growth and mature stages of oceanic shield
ŽMerle and Borgia, 1996; Van Wyk de Vries and Õolcanoes. Seven stages characterize the evolution of
Merle, 1996., as well as the slope instability of the the oceanic shield volcanoes located above an active
edifice ŽVan Wyk de Vries and Francis, 1997.. A hot spot, such as the Hawaıan¨ volcanoes ŽPeterson
volcano of sufficient size induces stresses that may and Moore, 1987; Decker et al., 1987; Moore and
deform its substratum. In turn, this deformation feeds Clague, 1992; Tilling and Dvorak, 1993; Rhodes and
back stresses which deform the edifice. Both stresses Lockwood, 1995.: Ž1. initial stage; Ž2. shield-build-
and deformation influence the evolution of magma ing stage including three submarine, sea-level, and
by varying the boundary conditions of magmatic subaerial substages; Ž3. capping stage; Ž4. erosional
systems. stage; Ž5. renewed volcanism stage; Ž6. atoll stage;
and Ž7. late seamount stage. The seven volcanoes
comprising the island of Hawaı¨ and its submarine
3. Contribution to geology: volcano growth and base are, in order of growth, Mahukona, Kohala,
destruction, large-scale instability, and relation- Mauna Kea, Hualalai, Mauna Loa, Kilauea, and the
ships with tectonics and sedimentation still submarine volcano, Loihi. The first four have
completed their shield-building stage.
To contribute to geology, volcanic geomorphol- The island of Hawaı¨ has grown at an average rate
ogy should Ža. produce detailed geomorphological of about 0.02 km2ryr for the past 600 kyr and
maps and expand the use of accurate chronological presently is close to its maximum size ŽMoore and
frameworks and compositional data through eruptive Clague, 1992; Fig. 5A.. On each volcano, the transi-
sequences, to identify eruptive or constructional tion from eruption of tholeiitic to alkalic lava occurs
‘stages’ in complex volcanoes, Žb. expand the capa- near the end of shield building. The rate of south-
bility of geomorphology in landscape history recon- eastern progression of the end of shield building, and
104 J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131

hence the postulated movement rate of the Pacific years to grow from the ocean floor to the time of the
¨ hotspot, in the interval from
plate over the Hawaıan end of shield building. They reach the ocean surface
Haleakala to Hualalai is about 13 cmryr. Based on about midway through this period ŽMoore and
this rate and an average spacing of volcanoes of Clague, 1992; Lipman, in Rhodes and Lockwood,
40–60 km, the volcano requires about 600 thousand 1995; Fig. 5B..
J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131 105

3.1.1.2. Caution needed to reconstruct the long-term to rhyolitic ejecta. Recurrent eruptions of small
eÕolution of stratoÕolcanoes. Recent detailed studies batches of dacite at irregular intervals and its secular
of time–volume-composition concerning the long- alternation with varied andesite and even andesitic
term behavior of stratovolcanoes in active arcs Že.g., basalt shows that there is no standard sequence, no
Mount Adams, Cascades: Hildreth and Lanphere, unidirectional progression, and certainly nothing pre-
1994; Tatara–San Pedro complex, Chile: Singer et determined in the evolution of stratovolcanoes
al., 1997. challenge previous studies in stating that ŽHildreth and Lanphere, 1994..
caution should be applied in reconstruction of the Andesite–dacite production in the focal region
life history of so-called polygenetic Õolcanoes. and coeval basaltic activity on the periphery have
Subdivision of complex stratovolcanoes into erup- coexisted at several documented stratocones Že.g.,
tive and constructional ‘stages’ needs detailed geo- Mount Adams: Hildreth and Lanphere, 1994..
logic mapping, accurate high-resolution geochronol- Scarcity or abundance of surrounding mafic cinder
ogy, and compositional data. Stratovolcanoes com- cones and lavas has nothing to do with maturity of
monly grow in spurts: construction of an imposing the stratovolcano system. The term parasitic should
cone needs take only 1–5% of the active lifetime of be abandoned as it implies dependence upon the
the volcano, i.e., construction rate of 1–5 km3rky. main stratocone and promotes the view that periph-
Higher rates are exceptional ŽHildreth and Lanphere, eral mafic eruptions are leaks from a central chamber
1994.. Stratovolcanoes can remain active between or conduit. Virtually the opposite is true: andesitic
the widely spaced episodes of peak productivity, as stratovolcanoes are the derivative features and flank
much as for half a million years. Documented exam- failures are lateral breakouts from a central conduit
ples of greater longevity are rare. ‘Dormancy’ is an system, whereas peripheral basalts, having their own
anthropocentric notion and generally refers only to conduit from mantle or deep-crustal depths, are more
an upper-crustal condition, without fundamental fundamental ŽHildreth and Lanphere, 1994..
change in deep-level magmatic processes ŽHildreth
and Lanphere, 1994.. 3.1.2. Volcano growth and erosion result from com-
Stratovolcanoes need not develop large upper- plex and interdependent processes
crustal magma chambers and need never evolve to-
wards a caldera-forming stage. Arc calderas that 3.1.2.1. Erosion-prone glacial periods haÕe altered
result from collapse of shallow reservoirs beneath the fast growth record of mid-latitude stratoÕolca-
stratovolcanoes ŽMazama, Krakatau, Santorini. are noes. The life history of Andean volcanoes provides
usually associated with large eruptions of rhyodacitic an important insight into how we may interpret the

Fig. 5. ŽA. From Moore and Clague, 1992, Žtheir fig. 8, caption modified.. Estimated ages for events in the life history of volcanoes on or
adjacent to the island of Hawaı. ¨ Volcano positions are projected and measured on a N408W line passing through Kilauea. Squares indicate
timing of transition from eruption of tholeiitic to alkalic lava Žtwo symbols where two transitions were dated.. Solid line is least-squares
regression line through points representing the end of shield building of five volcanoes Žsolid circles.; its slope is 13 cmra, the apparent rate
of progression of volcanism in this segment. Upper dashed line Žbirth. is drawn parallel with lower one through the postulated position of
Keikikea Žlarge circle. assuming zero age of birth; second dashed line Žend of early alkalic stage. is drawn through position of Loihi at zero
time; third dashed line Žemergence. is drawn midway between birth and end of shield building. Reproduced with the kind permission of the
Geological Society of America ŽGSA Copyright permission number 21569.. ŽB. From Lipman, 1995 Žhis fig. 12, caption modified..
Interpreted growth history of Mauna Loa, showing inferred magma-supply rates Žsolid line. and cumulative volumes Ždashed line. with time.
Curves are constrained by: Ž1. present total volume and magma-supply rates, Ž2. requirement for higher magma-supply rates during peak of
tholeiitic shield-building stage, Ž3. lower rates during probable early alkalic stage at Mauna Loa and analogous to Loihi, Ž4. indication from
the declining recent eruption rates and helium-isotope evidence that tholeiitic shield building is nearing completion and alkalic volcanism
should be expected at Mauna Loa in the not-too-distant geologic future, and Ž5. overall estimated lifespan of about 1 Ma for Hawaıan ¨
volcanoes. Reproduced with the kind permission of American Geophysical Union ŽMauna Loa revealed: Structure, Composition, History,
and Hazards, 1995..
106 J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131
J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131 107

200 ka by repeated glacial advances largely explain


this discrepancy, and it raises the possibility that
episodic erosion of mid-latitude frontal arc com-
plexes may be extensive and common. Hence, Singer
et al. Ž1997. raise fundamental questions bearing on
the interpretation of the life history of glacially
eroded stratovolcanoes.
Frontal arc volcanic complexes Žof the Andes.
may remain active for about 1 my, during which
time many changes in vent position, magma compo-
sition, and magma reservoir processes can occur.
Thus, several earlier volcanoes of possibly compara-
ble dimensions can be largely obliterated. Preserved
lavas and erosional hiatuses in dissected volcanoes,
consistent with global records of terrestrial ice ad-
vances, offer additional valuable source of informa-
tion bearing on the timing and extent of glaciations,
Fig. 6 Žcontinued.. to bracketing the age and extent of tills, drifts, and
moraines in regions of high elevation or maritime
climate.
chronological record of glacially eroded volcanic Accumulation of ice volumes leading up to glacial
edifices. The Tatara–San Pedro complex in the maxima is a slow process requiring 80–150 ky. By
Northern Chilean Andes ŽSinger et al., 1997; Fig. contrast, major deglaciations proceed rapidly Ž- 15
6A. preserves about 55 km3 of lavas that erupted ky. to glacial minima. In contrast to selectively
during seven eruptive sequences from at least three eroded young units and summit portions of any
central vent regions. Remnant, unconformity-bound volcanic edifice, the oldest lava at the base of a
sequences of lavas are separated by lacunae that sequence overlying an erosional unconformity may
represent significant periods of erosion. Estimated be emplaced very shortly after the glacial maximum.
growth rates for the two young volcanoes are 0.2 to Thus, the correspondence in timing between lacunae
0.3 km3rky ŽFig. 6B., i.e., three to five times greater in stratigraphic sequences and the global ice-volume
than a growth rate estimated from all preserved lavas maxima recorded in the astronomical time scale can-
in the complex Ž0.06 km3rky.. Removal of up to not be considered merely fortuitous ŽSinger et al.,
50–95% of the material erupted between 930 and 1997..

Fig. 6. After Singer et al., 1997 Žtheir figs. 5 and 8, modified, caption modified.. ŽA. Stratigraphy, K–Ar and 40Arr39Ar ages, and
paleomagnetic orientations of the Tatara–San Pedro complex. The astronomical time scale is based on marine oxygen isotope data. Even
numbered peaks in E18 O reflect global ice-volume maxima. Note that the oldest lavas in the Quebrada Turbia, Estero Molino lower, Estero
Molino upper, Guadal–Placeta San Pedro, and Volcan ´ San Pedro units provide minimum ages for the unconformities that they overlie. Ages
of these basal lavas correspond to periods of rapid deglaciation Žgray shading. following E18 O peaks at stages 20, 16, 10, 8, and 2. Volcan ´
Tatara is younger than the penultimate glaciation Žstage 6, 130 ka., but older than the last glaciation Žstage 2, 17 ka.. In addition, a gap in
the ages of preserved lavas of Volcan Pellado corresponds to the stage 6 maximum. Late activity at Volcan Pellado overlaps in age with
basal Tatara lavas Ždashed horizontal line.. Between three periods Ž930–770 ka, 605–220 ka, and 190–19 ka., the K–Ar and 40Arr39Ar ages
are arranged in ascending stratigraphic order from left to right. Three 40Arr39Ar ages from Cordon´ Guadal are shown as open symbols. The
Matuyama–Brunhes ŽM-B. polarity reversal is 775 " 10 ka in the astronomical time scale, identical with the ages obtained from
transitionally magnetized Quebrada Turbia lavas ŽN—normal, R—reversed, and T—transitional orientation.. ŽB. Cumulative eruptive
volume vs. time for the Tatara–San Pedro volcanic complex. Inset illustrates models projecting the growth of the complex at three different
rates, assuming that no erosion took place. Reproduced with the permission of the Geological Society of America ŽGSA Copyright
permission number 21569..
108 J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131

3.1.2.2. RepetitiÕe and instantaneous mass-wasting complex ‘Mercedes’-type stellate rift zone on one of
destruction characterize the deÕelopment of oceanic the Canary Islands. The geometry of the complex
Õolcanoes. In the Canary islands with Quaternary Canary three-branched rifts separated by angles of
volcanic activity, the construction has been closely 1208 ŽFig. 7B. suggests a least-effort fracture as a
controlled by rift-type volcano-tectonic features, result of magma-induced vertical upwards loading.
characterized by a tight cluster of recent emission The concentration of the recent eruptive activity and
centres piled up along narrow dorsal ridges. Two the depressions that may have been generated by
main types of rifts can be defined in terms of geome- gravitational slides are also included in the model
try: simple, as in La Palma, or triple, as in Tenerife Žsee discussion by Marti et al., 1996.. The impor-
and Hierro. Carracedo Ž1994. ŽFig. 7A. provided a tance of this model is that it may help to explain the
hotspot-based schematic model for the genesis of a main landforms and the two sources of volcanic

Fig. 7. ŽA. From Carracedo, 1996a Žhis fig. 7.. Contrasting evolutionary patterns and volcanic hazard sources in the western and eastern
islands of the Archipelago. The main factors controlling these differences are the activity of a hotspot and the lateral variation of the
structure, thickness and rigidity of the crust in the oceanic Žwest end. and the transitional Žeastern end, near the African coast. sectors of the
volcanic chain. Reproduced with the kind permission of the Geological Society ŽVolcano instability on the Earth and other Planets, special
publication 110, pp. 125–135.. ŽB. After Carracedo, 1994 Žhis fig. 6, modified.. A hotspot-based schematic model for the genesis of a
complex «Mercedes»-type stellate rift zone, on one of the Canary Islands. The concentration of the recent eruptive activity and the
depressions that may have been generated by gravitational slides are also indicated. ŽReprinted from Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal
Research, 60 Ž3–4., 225–241, Copyright 1994, with permission from Elsevier Science, 1999..
J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131 109

Fig. 7 Žcontinued..

hazards on the Canary Islands ŽCarracedo, 1996a,b.: depressions and, subsequently, the areas where catas-
Ž1. the concentration of recent ŽQuaternary–Holo- trophic slope failures may be pending.
cene. eruptive vents, and therefore, the statistically In the Canaries, two main types of large depres-
most probable location of future eruptions, and Ž2. sions are open toward the sea: straight-walled and
the genesis of the main open-towards-the sea Canary arcuate head basins such as the Orotava and Guimar
110 J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131

valleys in Tenerife and crescent-shaped coastal em- avalanches ) 1 km3 ŽSiebert et al., 1987.. The ratio
bayments like El Golfo in Hierro island. Their gene- of H to L for volcanic avalanches is much lower
sis has been the subject of a long debate. Faulting than the ratio for non-volcanic deposits of similar
and collapse in giant gravitational landslides ŽCar- volume, suggesting that low-rigidity, perhaps par-
racedo, 1996a,b; Masson, 1996. are now preferred to tially fluidized avalanches are capable of travelling
a mainly erosional origin. An alternative hypothesis great distances. Exceptional runout distance G 100
of lateral expansion of the Guima and Orotava val- km travelled by avalanches have been reported at
leys based on multiple cycles of erosion and filling stratovolcanoes such as Nevado del Colima in Mex-
of valleys by lava flows has also been proposed ico ŽStoopes and Sheridan, 1992..
ŽPalacios, 1994.. However, recent detailed mapping The widespread occurrence of slope failure in a
of areas of the submarine flanks of the Canaries has variety of tectonic settings suggests that it may be
revealed much new evidence of seven major land- the dominant catastrophic edifice-modifying process.
slides over the past 500,000 years, strengthening the Steep-sided andesitic and dacitic stratovolcanoes,
case for large-scale slope failure as a principal agent with a relief that can attain several km and upper
of island destruction ŽMasson, 1996.. slopes that can exceed 308, are obvious candidates
for slope failure Že.g., Socompa volcano, Northern
3.2. Large-scale instability processes, erosional Chile: Wadge et al., 1995.. Steep-sided but less
landforms, and debris-aÕalanches voluminous lava-dome complexes are also particu-
larly susceptible to slope failure. The air of perma-
As a consequence of rapid construction, many nence of large, low-angle shield volcanoes belies
volcanoes are liable to massive flank or slope fail- their inherent instability. Particularly noteworthy are
ures resulting from structural instability. More than 70 landslides that have occurred on the Hawaiian
20 major slope failures have occured globally during ridge, where they have removed volcano-flank sec-
the past 500 years, a rate exceeding that of caldera tors that exceed 1000 km3 in volume ŽMoore et al.,
collapse ŽSiebert, 1996.. Slope failures produce ex- 1989, 1994; Iverson, 1995.. A series of maps from
tremely mobile debris avalanches that can travel long several sources document the importance of land-
distances beyond the flanks of volcanoes at high slides, best exposed in the submarine realm, in the
velocities. The characteristics and origins of flank growth and decline of Mauna Loa and adjacent
failures and related deposits were described by Voight volcanoes ŽMoore and Chadwick, 1995.. Catas-
et al. Ž1983., Siebert et al. Ž1987., Crandell Ž1988., trophic slope failures are neither rare nor unique in
Glicken Ž1991., Moore et al. Ž1994., McGuire et al. the lifetime of a volcano. The summit edifice of
Ž1996., as follows. Augustine, AK, has repeatedly collapsed and regen-
Massive landslides create specific morphology and erated, averaging 150–200 years per cycle, during
deposits, i.e., horseshoe-shaped re-entrants into the the past 2000 years ŽBeget and Kienle, 1992.. The
edifice, and a high, steep-sided break-away scarp unprecedented frequency of summit edifice failure
having an amphitheatre shape. Debris avalanches was made possible by sustained lava effusion rates
typically form a hummocky terrain with water-filled over 10 times greater than is typical of plate-margin
depressions and steep flow margins, and thick hum- volcanoes.
mocky deposits with block and matrix facies of The origins of flank failure are bound to three
largely unsorted and unstratified angular-to-subangu- types of events ŽSiebert et al., 1987; Siebert, 1996.:
lar debris. A relationship exists between the distance magmatic eruption of Bezymianny type Ž1956.,
runout travelled by an avalanche and the failure non-magmatic explosions of Bandai type Ž1988., and
volume. The maximum failure volume of subaerial cold avalanches of Ontake type Ž1784.. Several
volcanoes typically does not exceed 10% of the structural and geomorphic factors contribute to flank
edifice volume. The ratio of vertical drop H to travel failure ŽVoight et al., 1983; Vallance et al., 1995;
length L range from 0.09 to 0.18 Žav., 0.13. for McGuire et al., 1996.: Ž1. steep dip slopes with
Quaternary volcanic avalanches between 0.1 and 1 alternating competent lavas and unconsolidated pyro-
km3 in volume and from 0.04 to 0.13 Žav., 0.09. for clastic materials; Ž2. zones of weakness within the
J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131 111

upper volcanic edifice, owing to hydrothermally al- the volcanic edifice itself can contribute to the weak-
tered rocks converted to clay minerals of low yield ness of its bedrock. In contrast to radially spreading
strength, accompanied by the boiling of supercritical volcanoes, preferential spreading in one direction is
hydrothermal fluids ŽLopez and Williams, 1993.; and critical to collapse development; whereas radial
Ž3. local extension promoted by parallel dike swarms spreading tends to generate inward-dipping faults
ŽHausback and Swanson, 1990.. which inhibit collapse, sector spreading generates
Yet important but enigmatic questions remain un- failure-prone outward-dipping structures. Spreading
solved. What processes can trigger slope instability in a preferential direction may be caused by buttress-
on low-angle shield volcanoes? Forces in addition to ing, by the regional slope of basement beds, by
gravitation must trigger the landslides ŽIverson, regional stress, by weak basement or by high fluid
1995.. Tilling and Dvorak Ž1993. invoke a seaward pressures under one side ŽVan Wyk de Vries and
displacement of the southern flank of Kilauea vol- Francis, 1997..
cano, and Owen et al. Ž1995. measured its rapid
deformation to be as much as 10 cm ay1 , based on
GPS measurements. The observations can be ex-
plained by slip on a low-angle fault beneath the
south flank combined with dilatation deep within
Kilauea’s rift system, both at rates of 10–15 cm ay1 .
What fundamental structural causes might lead to
an edifice collapse? Van Wyk de Vries and Francis
Ž1997. ŽFig. 8., diverging from previous works which
emphasized differences in eruption style associated
with flank failure ŽSiebert et al., 1987., argue that

Fig. 8. After Van Wyk de Vries and Francis, 1997 Žtheir fig. 3,
modified, caption modified.. Interpretation of spreading and col-
lapse structures at Mombacho, showing contrasting models for
basement failure at Las Isletas Ža and b., El Crater Žc. and
probable precursory features. Ža. Las Isletas: basement collapse.
Deep spreading on decollement ŽX. within the Las Sierras Forma-
tion rises to produce a frontal anticline at the foot of Mombacho.
Spreading induces differential movements within the upper parts
of the volcano, contributing to the initiation of slip on a plane ŽY.
within the cone. Once the dip-slip decollement is activated, the
mass above it places additional load on the spreading front,
inducing increased movement, and eventual failure through the
frontal anticline ŽZ.. Žb. Plan diagrams illustrating the difference
in structural style between a radially spreading and a sector
spreading volcano Žthat is, Mombacho.. Radial spreading pro-
duces inward dipping normal faults that cut any potential failure
plane in the cone. In contrast, sector spreading creates outward
dipping faults, which promote collapse. Žc. The El Crater collapse
crater is ;1.5 km wide and long, and 700 m deep. Its walls curve
inwards toward the opening, where there is a pronounced 30-m-
high lip ŽL.. Overall, the shape is that of a rotational slump failure
in a mechanically homogenous medium, so no pre-existing
decollement place is required. Such failures usually begin when
shear strength is reduced over a wide area. At El Crater this
homogeneous strength loss was produced by progressive hy-
drothermal alteration. l-32
112 J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131

3.3. Relationships between Õolcanism, tectonics, sed- The events mark the significance of the Sunda–
imentation, and drainage Tangkuban Perahu volcanic centre during the Late
Quaternary; the Sunda volcano collapsed into a
Volcano growth and erosion, as well as tectonics, caldera in which later the Tangkuban Perahu volcano
influence sedimentation and the evolution of drainage developed. Moreover, these eruptions controlled re-
patterns in volcanic landscapes. gional sedimentation and determined landform de-
velopment in the great basin area. In the vicinity of
the eruption centre, volcano-tectonic faulting formed
3.3.1. Modification of drainage pattern
the conspicuous E–W Lembang fault that controlled
In his study of the morphotectonic development
distribution of volcaniclastic sediments and the initi-
of southeast Australia, Ollier Ž1995. shows several
ation of a new drainage system in the Lembang area.
examples of drainage modifications in catchments
affected by the formation and erosion of huge volca-
noes and by the retreat of the Great Escarpement.
4. Contribution to volcanology: interplay of con-
Large volcanoes on or near the Great Divide resulted
struction and denudation processes throughout
in the formation and superimposition of radial
eruptive activity
drainage in the vicinity of the volcano, and major
drainage disruption in neighbouring regions, even
Volcanic geomorphology can contribute to physi-
affecting large rivers.
cal volcanology through the Ža. assessment of topo-
graphic effects on transport, erosion, and deposition
3.3.2. Complex relationships between Õolcanism, tec- of volcanogenic flows Že.g., pyroclastic density cur-
tonics, and sedimentation rents., Žb. analysis of the relationships between erup-
The geomorphic evolution of the Sunda volcanic tion phenomenology and eruptive processes, and Žc.
complex and the Bandung area, a large intramontane identification of the sources and climaticrtectonic
basin surrounded by volcanic highlands in Java ŽDam conditions which govern the emplacement of vol-
et al., 1996; Nossin et al., 1996., illustrates complex caniclastic deposits.
landform-determining processes, such as tectonic
subsidence, paroxysmal eruptions, volcanism-in- 4.1. Complex interplay of eruptiÕe actiÕity with geo-
duced faultingrrifting, drainage system adaptations, morphic processes
and intramontane lacustrine sedimentation. The mor-
phology of the Bandung basin and the Sunda– 4.1.1. Topographical effects on transport and em-
Tangkuban Perahu volcanic complex encompassed placement of pyroclastic flows
seven phases during the Middle–Late Quaternary, in Observations of recent or ongoing eruptions sug-
particular since 125,000 yr B.P.: Ž1. the early Ban- gest that high energy relief may exert effects on
dung basin during Middle Quaternary; Ž2. the start of transport and deposition of primary pyroclastic de-
lacustrine sedimentation and the formation of an posits, such as the flow-surge laid down by the blast
enclosed intramontane basin ca. 125,000 yr B.P.; Ž3. on 18 May 1980 at Mount St. Helens ŽFisher, 1990,
paroxysmal volcanic eruptions and formation of the 1995., and the block-and-ash flows at Unzen Ž1991–
Sunda caldera and the east Lembang fault ca. 105,000 1993.. The decoupling of pyroclastic currents is
yr B.P.; Ž4. ongoing lacustrine sedimentation accentuated by encounters with steep mountain ridges
105,000–50,000 yr B.P.; Ž5. second phase of Plinian of high relief ŽFisher, 1995.. In regions of rugged
and caldera-forming eruptions, and Bandung volcani- topography, the height of barrier ridges, slopes an-
clastic fan development 50,000-35,000 yr B.P.; Ž6. gles and gradients of the ground surface greatly
high lake levels and lacustrine sedimentation, and influence the effectiveness of decoupling processes
formation of the west Lembang fault 35,000–20,000 and flow directions. The topographical effect of
yr B.P.; Ž7. small eruptions of Tangkuban Perahu breaks in slope on the flanks of stratocones con-
volcano and minor basin subsidence and sedimenta- tributes to the decoupling of two zones within a
tion, and minor fluvial erosion after 16,000 yr B.P. pyroclastic flow Že.g., at Mt. Merapi, 1994.: the
J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131 113

channelized, dense, gravity-driven part of the pyro- and the effusion rate was high Ž4 = 10 5 m3 dayy1 ;
clastic flow and the unconfined, dilute and low-con- May 1991 to Februrary 1993., but endogenously
centration, turbulent part of the flow whose destruc- when the dome became large and the effusion rate
tive effects project far beyond the valley channels. declined Ž5 = 10 4 m3 dayy1 ; February 1993 to Au-
The interactions of pyroclastic currents with topogra- gust 1994.. The volume of magma erupted during
phy include blocking, downslope drainage, formation each pulse was 1.3 = 10 8 m3 and 0.6 = 10 8 m3 ,
of secondary pyroclastic flows in valleys, and devel- respectively ŽNakada et al., 1995..
opment of dividing streamlines and decoupling Magma supply rates are high on recently grown
ŽFisher, 1995.. domes ŽRedoubt, 1989–1990: Miller, 1994; Unzen,
1991–1994: Nakada et al., 1995. or present-day
4.1.2. Erosion during waxing phases of pyroclastic
growing domes ŽSoufriere Hills, Monserrat, 1996–
flows-surges
1998.. At Monserrat, a dome appeared in mid-
Waxing phases of blasts and pyroclastic flows can
November 1995 in the English’s Crater of Soufriere
create erosional landforms such as erosional furrows
Hills within 4 months of the eruption’s onset ŽYoung
formed during the 1980 eruptions of Mount St.
et al., 1997.. The dome has grown endogenously and
Helens ŽKieffer and Sturtevant, 1988; Kieffer and
exogenously like at Unzen, while dome collapses on
Simonds, 1995.. Field estimate for the erosion rate
the NE flank have triggered many block-and-ash
by the 18 May 1980 lateral blast is 20.6 kg my2 sy1 ,
pyroclastic flows that were channeled in the Tar
corresponding to an erosion depth of nearly 1 m in a
river valley towards the East. Since October 1996, a
time of 30 s. The 7 August 1980 pyroclastic flow
new dome has filled in the explosion vent and
triggered an erosion rate of 14.3 kg m2 sy1 , corre-
pyroclastic flows have resumed, even towards the
sponding to 2 m of erosion in 5 min ŽKieffer and
West where the capital city, Plymouth, only 4 km
Simonds, 1995.. Pyroclastic flows generated in the
from the crater, is therefore evacuated. Since January
19–20 April 1993 eruption of Lascar Volcano, Chile,
1997, magma supply increased again to 2 = 10 5 m3
produced spectacular erosion features ŽSparks et al.,
dayy1 up to as much as 7 = 10 5 m3 dayy1 ŽYoung
1997.. Exposed bedrock and boulders suffered se-
et al., 1997.. In February 1997, the volume of the
vere abrasion, producing smoothed surface on coarse
dome was 40 = 10 6 m3.
breccias and striations and percussion marks on
bedrock and large boulders. Erosional furrows devel-
4.2. Interactions in construction and denudation pro-
oped with wavelengths of 0.5–2 m and depth of
cesses
0.1–0.3 m. Erosive features were produced where
flows accelerated through topographic restrictions or
4.2.1. LaÕa flow and coastal processes
where they moved over steep slopes. Much of the
Lava flows entering seawater create a prograding
erosive phenomena are attributed to lithic clasts
lava delta on the South coast of Hawaı¨ island ŽMat-
which segregated to the base of the flows. The
tox and Mangan, 1997.. For nearly 14 years, pahoe-
erosive features, distribution of lithic clasts and de-
hoe flows from Kilauea advance down the flank of
posit morphology indicate that the 1993 flows were
the volcano from the Pu’u’O’o lava cone and form a
highly concentrated avalanches dominated by parti-
system of tubes that transport lava to the coastline.
cle interactions.
An average volume of 350,000 m3 dayy1 of lava
4.1.3. Monitored and measured processes of dome was fed through the tube system between 1986 and
growth and magma supply 1994. During this time, 2 km2 of new land was
Processes of dome growth can be observed added to the island. Two types of interactions were
through aerial photographs and satellite images, and, observed at the front of the delta ŽMattox and Man-
in some cases, measured through a real-time moni- gan, 1997, Fig. 9.: open mixing of lava and seawater
toring network Že.g., Mount St. Helens, Santiaguito: when the complete collapse of lava bench severs
Anderson et al., 1995; Unzen, Merapi, Monserrat.. A active lava tube; confined mixing conditions when
dacite dome at Unzen volcano, for example, grew in partial collapse of lava bench submerges and frac-
two pulses, mainly exogenously when it was small tures a portion of active lava tube.
114 J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131

Fig. 9. After Mattox and Mangan, 1997 Žtheir Fig. 4, modified.. Hypothetical cross section of a lava delta and bench showing the location of
littoral hydrovolcanic explosions. ŽA. Hyaloclastites formed at the ocean entry build a submarine debris slope that is subsequently capped by
pahoehoe flows. Lava tubes on the bench can reside below or at sea level, due to continuous subsidence of the delta. ŽB. Profile of the front
of the delta immediately following a complete bench collapse. ŽC. Profile of the front of the delta immediately following a partial collapse
of the bench. ŽReprinted from Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, 75, 1–17, Copyright 1997, with permission from Elsevier
Science..

4.2.2. EruptiÕe actiÕity, sea-leÕel changes, and ero- ited to subaerial and very shallow water settings, and
sion at seamounts, guyots, and shoaling Õolcanoes may be explosive or effusive. Autoclastic fragmenta-
Effects of sea-level change induced erosion have tion operates universally although abundant hyalo-
been observed at Palinuro, Italy, and effects of sub- clastite is restricted to subaqueous environments.
marine eruptions were discovered in 1996 at Loihi Pillows are a hallmark of subaqueous lava eruption
seamount, the next-to-be born Hawaıan¨ island, SE of or flow of subaerial lava into subaqueous settings.
Kilauea ŽCarlowicz, 1996.. Lithofacies associations
at shoaling or active subaerial island volcanoes can 4.2.3. Interaction of collapse and exhumation pro-
be related to stages, early and late, of emergence cesses at caldera walls
ŽMcPhie et al., 1993; McPhie, 1995.. Facies associa- Present-day caldera walls often present a complex
tions are sensitive to proximity to source vents and assemblage of cliff surfaces of different ages, which
to water depth of eruption and emplacement. Litho- can result from repeated collapses that exhumed
facies associations bear on the variation in eruption earlier caldera cliffs and unconformities on the same
and fragmentation processes with respect to environ- caldera rims. Geomorphological mapping at San-
ment, especially water depth. Dry eruptions are lim- torini ŽDruitt and Francaviglia, 1992. shows that the
J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131 115

caldera wall in the north, NE, and east preserves ‘snow slurry’ lahars, then to large dilute and small
evidence for three generations of cliff surface, those concentrated lahars in the Whangaehu catchment of
of Minoan age ca 3.6 ka Žs 17th century BC. and Ruapehu in 1995 ŽCronin et al., 1996, 1997.. These
two earlier generations of caldera: the Skaros caldera hybrid wet flows Žbetween conventional pyroclastic
about 76–54 ka and the Cape Riva caldera ca. 21 ka, flows and conventional lahars. are hazardous insofar
which exhumes cliffs of the Skaros caldera. There- as their reduced internal friction projects destructive
fore, field relationships are critical in unravelling the flows down valleys beyond the reach of dry pyro-
geomorphology of Bronze-Age Santorini immedi- clastic currents. Such deposits at snowclad volcanoes
ately before the Minoan eruption, with a large diame- are geomorphically distinct, but they soon become
ter, a central island, and a probably flooded caldera, extensively reworked and hard to recognize in the
because the 21 ka caldera walls extend to present-day geologic record.
sea level at several locations. Yet the processes involved in volcano–glacier
interactions remain not well understood. Perturba-
tions on ice-clad active volcanoes record a variety of
4.2.4. Volcano–glacier interactions processes, including rapid melting, snow and ice
Ice-clad or snow-covered active volcanoes are avalanching, surficial abrasion, and mechanical
home to eruptions during which combined eruptive, scouring or gullying ŽThouret et al., 1995.. The loss
glacial, and geomorphic processes lead to generation of large volumes of snow and ice during eruptions
of primary and secondary sediment—water flows results mainly from Ž1. the passage of pyroclastic
termed lahars or volcanic debris flows ŽMajor and flows and surges or hot blasts on the glacier, Ž2. the
Newhall, 1989; Pierson et al., 1990; Thouret, 1990.. contact of subaerial lava flows or tephra with ice or
Five historic eruptions at four snow-clad volcanoes snow, and Ž3. the eruptive or geothermal activity
ŽTokachi–Dake, Nevado del Ruiz, Cotopaxi, and which melts the bases of ice caps. Large volumes of
Mount St. Helens . have demonstrated that meltwater released in a short time span Že.g., 38.5–
snowmelt-generated volcanic debris flows can: Ž1. 44 = 10 6 m3 in 20–90 min at Nevado del Ruiz on
have peak discharges as large as 10 5 m3 sy1, Ž2. 13 November 1985. imply a high melting rate and a
attain velocities as high as 20–40 m sy1 , Ž3. mobi- vigorous heat transfer from hot eruptive products to
lize as much as 10 8 m3 of debris, and Ž4. travel more snow and ice. Preliminary melting scenarios based
than 100 km Žas debris flows. in valleys draining the on vigorous deposition of hot debris on snow point
volcanoes ŽPierson, 1995.. The risk to human life to a melting rate as high as 2 cm miny1 . Mechanical
from such large debris flows was tragically demon- entrainment and comminution of snow and ice are
strated in 1985 at Nevado del Ruiz volcano in important processes in releasing large volumes of
Colombia, where snowmelt-triggered lahars in three meltwater that contribute to trigger lahars.
of the volcano’s major drainage systems killed more
than 23,000 people ŽPierson et al., 1990; Thouret,
1990..
Attention has been drawn upon new types of 5. Contribution to sedimentology: significance of
volcaniclastic sediments and flows, such as the volcaniclastic sediments, flows, and facies models
‘ volcanic mixed avalanches’ from the November 13,
1985 eruption of Nevado del Ruiz volcano ŽVande- Volcanic geomorphology can Ža. identify sedi-
meulebrouck et al., 1993; Pierson and Janda, 1994., mentary facies associations and facies models for
and unusual ‘ice diamicts’ Žcomprising clasts of dynamic volcano-sedimentary systems, Žb. establish
glacier ice and subordinate rock debris in a matrix of criteria for recognizing volcaniclastic deposits in old
ice, snow, coarse ash, and frozen pore water. em- volcanic successions, and infer the role of climatic–
placed during the December 15, 1989 eruption of tectonic effects on transport and deposition, and Žc.
Redoubt volcano, AK ŽWaitt et al., 1994., and the analyse the characteristics of sediment gravity flows
1992 eruption of Mount Spurr, AK ŽWaitt, 1995.. to determine relevant parameters for modelling their
Transient, mixed avalanches transformed to initial behaviour.
116 J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131

5.1. Volcaniclastic sediments and flows rapid erosion and reworking. Long intervals are char-
acterised by small but frequent eruptions Ž1943,
The rapid growth and denudation of volcanic
1995–1996., providing a continual supply of debris
landforms combine to cause serious erosion in
to the surrounding ring plain. Larger explosive erup-
drainage systems and supply huge volumes of sedi-
tions trigger major pulses of ring plain sedimenta-
ments through the catchments toward neighbouring
tion. The volcano can be divided into two parts: a
lowlands. Because tectonism and volcanism are
composite cone of 110 km3 in volume, surrounded
closely associated at plate margins, and in some
by an equally voluminous ring plain. Cone-forming
instances within plates, knowledge about volcaniclas-
sequences are dominated by sheet- and autobrec-
tic sediments and rocks may be critical for tectonics,
ciated-lava flows, which seldom reach the ring plain.
depositional and erosional processes, as well as for
The ring plain is built predominantly from the prod-
understanding the economic significance of mineral-
ucts of explosive volcanism, both the distal primary
ized and alteration zones in both ancient and modern
pyroclastic deposits and the reworked material eroded
successions.
from the cone. Much of the material entering the ring
The importance of volcaniclastic sediments raises
plain is transported by lahars, either generated di-
at least four questions: Ž1. How do we identify
rectly by eruptions or triggered by the high intensity
volcanogenic sediments and lithofacies associations?
Ž2. What are the types, transport processes, and rain storms which characterize the region. Ring plain
debris are reworked rapidly by concentrated and
behaviour of volcanogenic flows? Ž3. How much and
hyperconcentrated streams in pulses of rapid aggra-
how rapidly do rates of sedimentationrerosion fluc-
dation immediately following eruptions and more
tuate? Ž4. How quickly do disturbed catchments
gradually in the longer intervals between eruptions.
recover following large eruptions?
5.1.1. Distribution and significance of Õolcaniclastic 5.1.2. Significance of continental Õolcanogenic sedi-
sediments and facies models mentation
Sedimentary processes exert a great influence on The complex variations in the distribution of vol-
modern volcanoes, while reworked volcanic rocks caniclastic sediments have several sources. For ex-
are volumetrically important and must be significant ample, the complex distribution of the volcaniclastic
in the geological record. deposits in an active rift can be caused by faulting,
Generalised facies models are based on the identi- sub-basin development, sources of primary materials,
fication and distribution of proximal, medial, and and local depositional environments ŽMathisen and
distal, nonmarine volcaniclastic facies and sedimen- McPherson, 1991.. However, in his study on conti-
tary cycles triggered by large eruptions around stra- nental deposition of an extensional basin in SE Ari-
tovolcanoes, such as Fuego, Guatemala ŽVessell and zona, Smith Ž1994. ŽFig. 10. offers an evaluation of
Davies, 1981 in: Cas and Wright, 1987.. Facies are continental sedimentation in response to climate,
features of a sedimentary unit portraying the pro- rather than tectonics. Covariance of climatic condi-
cesses of origin and source, and environment of tions Žrecorded in the pedogenic-carbonate isotope
deposition. Among all modern volcanoes, stratovol- data. and sedimentologic parameters Žsedimentation
canoes are very prone to mass-wastage because they rate, channel geometry, and facies abundance.
are high topographic features and they host great strongly suggests that climate can produce temporal
volumes of easily removed fragmental material. Their variations in sedimentological processes that have
growth is therefore reflected almost instantly in the heretofore been attributed only to tectonics. Hence,
sedimentary record of surrounding regions. caution should apply in asserting tectonics as the
Composite volcanoes are complex dynamic vol- only significant long-time period influence on depo-
cano-sedimentary systems. Hackett and Houghton sitional style in nonmarine basins.
Ž1989. proposed a facies model for the composite Tephro-chronology and associated dating methods
Ruapehu volcano ŽNew Zealand. of Quaternary age, can provide a framework for volcanism, tectonism,
with moderate discharge rates of magma and a wet and paleoenvironmental reconstruction of basins sur-
temperate climate, and whose products are subject to rounding a volcanic province. Tephro-chronology
J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131 117

Fig. 10. After Smith, 1994 Žhis Fig. 14, caption modified.. Summary diagram of paleoclimate interpretations and temporal variations in
sedimentological characteristics within the chronologic control of the magnetic-polarity time scale. ŽA. Paleoclimatic interpretation of
paleosol-carbonate isotope data. ŽB. Sediment accumulation rates Žnot adjusted for compaction. averaged over time intervals defined by the
magnetic polarity time scale. Bar widths reflect variations in rates determined from different stratigraphic sections and include uncertainties
in the exact position of reversals in each section, which depends on spacing of paleomagnetic-sample sites. ŽC. Channel geometries and
abundance of coarse channel facies in eastern piedmont sections. The average and range of the percentages of sections composed of
sediment coarser than medium sand are shown over intervals defined by the polarity time scale to facilitate comparison to accumulation
rates. Ranges for all sections and averages are shown; only channel-tract sections ŽSW, RR, DW, CR2. are represented for depositional
interval II. ŽD. Temporal range of hydromorphic-paleosol and pond-carbonate rocks related to shallow water tables. Reproduced with the
kind permission of the Geological Society of America ŽGSA Copyright permission no. 21569..

was used as a tool in the 2-Ma-long geomorphic nedy, 1994; Alloway et al., 1995; Shane et al.,
history of ignimbrite plateaus in New Zealand ŽKen- 1996.. Fifty-four tephra beds span the interval 2–0.6
118 J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131

Ma and provide an event frequency of 1r19 ka flows, whose main characteristics are sediment con-
Žmuch higher than the ignimbrite frequency 1r100 centration, deformation rate and velocity ŽPierson
ka.. The tephra beds provide a framework for a and Costa, 1987; Scott, 1988; Smith and Lowe,
paleoenvironmental reconstruction of the Taupo Vol- 1991..
canic Zone Žsouthern North Island.. Volcaniclastic
transport routes from the TVZ to basins in the south 5.2.2. Origins and characteristics of cohesiÕe and
and southeast, and through the site of present moun- noncohesiÕe debris flows
tain ranges, supplied material to a terrestrial lowland Following the pioneer study by Neall Ž1976.,
fore-arc area in the interval 1.64–0.7 Ma. Uplift and recent research incorporates post-1980 trends in
deformation since 0.7 Ma have disrupted pale- recognition of origins related to landslides, surges of
odrainage routes, diverting them to the north and meltwater from hot volcanic products on snow and
southwest ŽShane et al., 1996.. ice, failures of natural dams formed by volcanic
flows, especially debris avalanches, and glacial out-
5.2. Type, characteristics, and origins of Õol- burst flows ŽScott and Sheridan, 1997.. The di-
canogenic flows chotomy of cohesive Žmuddy. and noncohesive
Žgranular. lahars is illustrated through grain-size plots
Volcanogenic flows can be divided into pyroclas- ŽScott, 1988; Scott et al., 1995.. The textures and
tic Žprimary., volcaniclastic Žsecondary., and epiclas- origins of cohesive and noncohesive lahars are anal-
tic flows that erode, transport, and redeposit frag- ysed in terms of transformation of noncohesive la-
mental sediments on and around volcanoes Že.g., Cas hars to hyperconcentrated flows and streamflows
and Wright, 1987.. Among volcanogenic flows, the ŽPierson and Scott, 1985., textural changes within
debris avalanches and lahars or volcanic debris flows transformations, transition facies, and cause of dearth
have drawn the attention of volcanologists, geomor- of fine sediment Žclay and silt.. The distinction has
phologists, hydrologists, and sedimentologists since been made between the probable syneruptivity of
the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens. Many lahar non-cohesive, granular flows Že.g., from pyroclastic
flows have been watched, filmed, and monitored, flows. vs. the possible non-eruptive origins of cohe-
especially on active stratovolcanoes ŽMount St. He- sive lahars, e.g., from debris avalanche, such as the
lens: Janda et al., 1981; Sakurajima, Unzen, etc.., 3.8 km3 Osceola mudflow from Mount Rainier ŽScott
and considerable progress has been achieved in the et al., 1995; Vallance and Scott, 1997..
90s in understanding the processes, behaviour and
rheology of lahar flows. After pyroclastic flows, 5.3. Transport processes and behaÕiour of sediment
lahars are the most deadly volcanic phenomena on graÕity flows
active and dormant volcanoes, projecting effects far
beyond the areas affected by the pyroclastic flows. Interpretations of transport processes and be-
haviour of debris flows ŽScott and Sheridan, 1997.
5.2.1. A spectrum of sediment graÕity flows are based on Ž1. observations on modern flows and
A simple but synthetic classification of mass on deposits of both ancient and modern flows, Ž2.
movements and flows on natural steep slopes has grain-size analysis, texture and sedimentological
been proposed by Coussot and Meunier Ž1996. as a characteristics Žcritical diameter, phases and facies of
function of solid fraction and material type. Debris debris-flow deposits, clast support vs. matrix sup-
flows occupy a field between landslides and hyper- port., Ž3. sedimentary structures such as Ža. inverse
concentrated flows and encompass mudflows and and normal grading and Žb. boundary structures, i.e.,
granular flows on the base of cohesion and one or sole layer, sheared boundary, dewatering structures,
two-phase flow. Sediment gravity flows differ from lamination and stratification, sharp contacts, and in-
flood flows, based on greater velocities, greater im- clusion of fragile megaclasts ŽScott, 1988; Scott et
pact forces, depositional record, and longer-term ef- al., 1995., Ž4. sedimentary fabric of debris-flow de-
fects. Debris flows transform into hyperconcentrated posits, clast roundness and composition, lahar bulk-
flows and streamflows and, with debris avalanches, ing factors, and progressive downstream improve-
are part of a spectrum of subaerial sediment gravity ment in sorting, increase in sand and gravel, and
J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131 119

decrease in clay. These downstream progressions are The distinction among cohesive lahar, noncohesive
caused by incorporation of better sorted gravel and lahar, and debris avalanche is important for the
sand Že.g., Osceola mudflow at Mount Rainier: Val- purpose of hazard assessment, because cohesive la-
lance and Scott, 1997.. hars spread much more widely than noncohesive
Present-day debate bears on behaviour and em- lahars that travel similar distances, and travel farther
placement of debris flow, i.e., en masse emplace- and spread more widely than debris avalanches of
ment as opposed to incremental deposition Žlike pro- similar volume ŽScott and Sheridan, 1997..
gressive aggradation for emplacement of pyroclastic
flows.. Normal grading observed in the Osceola
6. Process-oriented geomorphology: denudation
mudflow-deposits from Mount Rainier is best ex-
rates and geomorphic impact of substantial erup-
plained by incremental aggradation of a flow wave,
tions on volcanic landscapes
coarser grained at its front than at its tail ŽVallance
and Scott, 1997, Fig. 11.. Volcanic geomorphology should be more
The results and questions to be solved are used process-oriented through the Ža. development of ac-
for the paleohydrological study of sediment gravity curate methods for measuring rates of geomorphic
flows and to outline potentially hazardous areas to be processes that shape ephemeral volcanic constructs,
affected by such flows, in particular by lahars: esti- Žb. identification of sources of material which con-
mation of the cross-sectional area of flow, of the tribute to sediment-delivery systems and of the fac-
velocity, discharge, extent and volume of flows, and tors that control the sedimentary budget on slopes
preparation of maps of inundation areas Že.g., Mount and in valley channels draining active volcanoes, and
Rainier: Scott et al., 1995; Scott and Sheridan, 1997.. Žc. measurement and comparison of the geomorphic

Fig. 11. From Vallance and Scott Ž1997, their fig. 13, caption modified.. Schematic diagram of stage height versus time Žhydrograph. for
mass flow at point in bottom of valley, and depositional sequence of flow illustrating incremental-deposition model for explaining normal
grading. Deposition illustrated for two stations 1 and 2 at heights h1 and h 2 above valley bottom and with ultimate thicknesses t1 and t 2 .
Short dashed lines through hydrograph indicate uniform incremental deposition. Sense of motion of mass flow is to left. Reproduced with
the kind permission of the Geological Society of America ŽGSA Copyright permission no. 21569..
120 J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131

impact on selected catchments and their hydrologic crater enlargment Ž109 mrMa., internal valley
response before, during, and after eruptions. Hence, growth Ž1.3 kmrMa., and average cone lowering
volcanic geomorphology should help to refine sedi- Ž31.5 mrMa. seem to answer the question of to what
mentary and geomorphic parameters for the expo- extent the stratovolcanoes are degraded. The calcu-
nential decay model. lated erosion rates seem reasonable in worldwide
comparison in moderate continental climate: the cone
6.1. Denudation rates on Õolcanic landforms and on lowering rate 31.5 m May1 fits well with global
landscapes denudation rates inferred from other methods. Not
surprisingly, time is the most important factor that
A central question in volcanic geomorphology is explains the morphometric characteristics by about
how short- and long-term denudation rates of volca- 40%. Adding two more factors, size-depth Žcrater–
noes have varied over time, in response to erosional cone. and the distance from erosion base level, the
episodes promoted by climate and sea-level changes, stratovolcano morphology can be explained by 75%.
and tectonics.
6.1.3. Long-term denudation rate in Õolcanic land-
6.1.1. On elementary Õolcanic landforms scapes
Elementary volcanic landforms, like monogenetic Short-term rates throw little light on the issue for
cinder cones and single lava flows, have a clear determining how landscapes have evolved over enor-
starting time of geomorphic development, depending mous periods of time, which requires reliable
on climatic and physiographic factors. The evolution chronological markers. In SE Australia, however, the
of tephra cones has long been the focus of morpho- widespread preservation of Tertiary basalts through-
metric studies Že.g., Kieffer, 1971 in: Cas and Wright, out the highlands and adjacent lowlands offers
1987.. From statistical analysis on 38 cinder cones considerable scope for measuring the processes of
with a maximum age of 3 Ma from the San Fran- wearing down and wearing back in the long-term
cisco volcanic field in Arizona, Wood Ž1980. distin- denudation of a highland mass ŽNott et al., 1996..
guished three different stages. With time and increas- Both of these processes, dominance of scarp retreat
ing diameter, cones show decreases in cone height, vs. summit lowering in the denudation of a highland
cone heightrcone basal diameter ratio and slope, but mass, are found to be insignificant compared to the
the ratio of crater diameter-cone basal diameter does role of fluvial gorge extension over the last 30 m.y.
not appear to change. On the other hand, incision Headward advancement of the Shoalhaven Gorge
rates in lava flow bedrocks measured in a variety of has been occurring at approximately 15 times the
volcano-tectonic environments average 12.7 cm kay1 rate of major escarpment retreat Ž2500 m vs. 170
ŽRighter, 1997.. They range from as low as 0.5–8 mrMa., 250 times the average rate of summit lower-
cm kay1 in Hawaı¨ to as high as 23–25 cm kay1 in ing, and 500 times the rate of interfluve consump-
the Atenguillo Valley, Jalisco ŽMexico. and even up tion. Over the long term, the highlands in this region
to 30 cm kay1 in Utah. will become considerably more dissected well before
they decrease substantially in height or are narrowed.
6.1.2. On composite landforms The conclusion also has important bearing upon
Francis Ž1993. has summarized five stages in the models predicting isostasic rebound from assumed
´
erosional history of a volcanic stratocone. Karatson character and rates of denudation.
Ž1996. made use of the unique features of the Neo-
generQuaternary volcanic chain in the Carpathians: 6.2. Geomorphic impact of eruptions and sediment
age progression is reflected well in degraded strato- deliÕery on landscapes
volcanoes from south to north in a similar moderate
continental climate. Based on a complex morphomet- Recent studies on volcanic landscapes affected by
ric analysis for 19 crater remnants dated from 11 Ma eruptions indicate that the geomorphic impact Žero-
to 0.4 Ma, 26 variables have been examined by sion and sedimentation, and the subsequent recovery
regression and factor analyses: numerical values of of disturbed watersheds. is complex, with an initial
J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131 121

stage of accelerated erosion followed by an exponen- distance from the cone, are still covered with deep
tial decrease over a few years. Noteworthy, the ash and unvegetated, thus exposed to erosional pro-
measured decreasing rate does not imply that erosion cesses for a long time. Floodplains are the most
rates return to ‘normal’ pre-eruption rates. active area, where continuous floods during the rainy
period add sediments or induce the incision of chan-
6.2.1. Exponential decrease of the impact of eruption nels along the edges of the lava fields. By contrast,
on landscapes lava fields are the least affected by erosional pro-
Most of the observations and studies of erosional cesses and most of the flows have a fresh appearance
processes are short-term and follow the first period after 50 years. Thus, erosion processes and integra-
after the eruption. Great volumes of clastic materials tion of drainage systems from basaltic lava flows are
rapidly flood sedimentary environments and are sup- slow and may take centuries or thousands of years,
plied directly to basins, with sediment delivery and as no integrated drainage is found in historically
erosion rates increasing by two to four orders of formed lava fields in different world climates ŽInbar
magnitude above the pre-eruption rates for non-af- et al., 1994, 1995..
fected areas ŽSwanson et al., 1983.. However, ero-
sion and sedimentation processes in volcanic land- 6.2.3. Long-term sediment yield from impacted wa-
scapes affected by small to modest eruptions show a tersheds are poorly known
rapid decline, e.g., from 25–100 mm ay1 in the first The impact of non-varying watershed parameters
2 years to 1–5 mm ay1 within 5 years of the on erosion processes could be assessed over the
eruption of Mount St. Helens. Initial rates decrease Late-glacial and Holocene periods in the small Lac
with increase of infiltration in the ash layer, develop- Chambon watershed Ž39 km2 , Massif Central,
ment of a vegetation cover and a stable drainage France., which exhibits forms inherited from the last
system. glacier extension in ancient mountain relief without
tectonics ŽMacaire et al., 1997.. Computation of
6.2.2. Long-term effect of small to moderate erup- stored material volumes and sediment yield values
tions from plutonic and volcanic source rocks over the
Following up the observations of Segerstrom past 15,500 years in the lake Chambon watershed
Ž1950. on erosional and depositional processes that gave accurate information: the mean mechanical ero-
took place on the Paricutin’s cone and lava field, sion capacity by slope processes Ž16 " 6 m. was 13
Inbar et al. Ž1994. emphasized the long-term effect times greater than by running water Ž1.2 " 0.3 m.,
and the recovery rates of the different landscapes 50 but it developed over only a quarter of the watershed
years after the eruption Ž1943–1953.. Three main surface. Fluctuations in sediment yield consisted of a
periods of erosion were distinguished by Segerstrom: 2.5-fold increase during cold and dry climate ŽYoung
Ž1. accelerated erosion between the beginning of the Dryas. contrasting to a moderate decrease during
eruption in 1943 and the end of the rain period of humid climates ŽPre-Boreal.. A threefold increase in
1944; Ž2. a deceleration period between 1944 and erosion over the last 1400 years shows the impact of
1952; and Ž3. a gradient deceleration in erosion rates human-induced deforestation. Erosion rates as high
during the post eruption period until 1970, until they as those computed over thousand of years can be
reach the normal values for the area. However, the attained over a few years only in volcanic water-
erosion rates as of 1990 are about 50% above nor- sheds affected by voluminous eruptions ŽG 10 km3 ..
mal. The trend in the next period will be of slower
rates of erosion and may extend over decades or 6.3. Dramatic response from disturbed catchments to
centuries until a complete rehabilitation of the area. substantial eruptions
In addition, rates of erosion and recovery will
depend strongly on the different landforms in the Two cases are presented: the geomorphic effects
area. On the cone and in the crater, erosion processes of the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens and the
are slow as the vegetation cover grows rapidly. Most first annual sediment budget Ž1980–1981., and the
of the areas within the 25 cm isopach at about 8 km extraordinary hydrologic response of the volcanic
122 J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131

landscape following the 1991 eruption of Mount tephra on the volcano’s flanks that would later be the
Pinatubo ŽThe Philippines.. primary source sediment for lahars. Numerous debris
flows and hyperconcentrated flows were triggered
during and following 1991 and affected 8 major
6.3.1. Assessment of the 1980–1981 sediment budget
drainages of Mount Pinatubo ŽPierson et al., 1997..
around Mount St. Helens
They were triggered by Ž1. monsoonal rainstorms,
Rosenfeld Ž1996. used a geomorphic approach
sometimes enhanced by the passage of typhoons
instead of a hydrologic approach to assess the sedi-
farther to the north, Ž2. volcanically induced convec-
ment budget around Mount St. Helens. First, poten-
tive rainstorms over localized heat sources, and Ž3.
tial sediment sources were identified, based on aerial
breakouts from debris dammed lakes. Lahars have
photography and field investigations. Second, mea-
been flowing into densely populated areas of central
surable landform units were categorized as well as
Luzon over the past 8 years, taking a toll of lives,
numerous measurable temporary storage sites and
leaving more than 50,000 persons homeless, affect-
sediment sinks. Third, a geomorphic classification of
ing more than 1,350,000 people in 39 towns and four
surface materials and landform types was con-
large cities, and causing enormous property losses
structed from post-eruption, repeated aerial photogra-
ŽG 1000 km2 of prime agricultural land. and social
phy. In addition, 65 control points were established
disruption ŽJanda et al., 1997.. Although the areas
and marked along the Toutle river valley, providing
affected by lahars have progressively expanded, the
over 150 photogrammetric cross-sections of the con-
frequency of lahar events has decreased and the
stantly changing channel network.
number of impacted river systems had dwindled to
Two types of sediment budget information were
four in 1995, as source materials were gradually
obtained ŽRosenfeld, 1996.. The total sediment stor-
depleted.
age was as high as 26 = 10 8 m3. The net sediment
yield was computed as 65 = 10 6 m3 for the first year
6.3.2.2. Sources of material and flow types. Lahar
after the eruption: two thirds of which were deliv-
sediment at Mount Pinatubo came from five distinct
ered through erosion by the channel network at the
sources: Ž1. coarse tephra dropped from the eruption
expense of the debris-avalanche deposit. The geo-
columns of the mid-June eruptions; Ž2. pyroclastic-
morphic sources, volume, size, range and transport
flow deposits; Ž3. fine-grained tephra from ash-cloud
characteristics associated with storm events of differ-
deposits, phreatic explosions, and eruptive events
ent magnitudes were assessed. Besides lahars, the
postdating June 15; Ž4. 1991 lahar deposits; and Ž5.
most active erosional processes were shallow mass
unconsolidated volcaniclastic deposits predating June
wasting, rill and bank erosion, and fillingrbreaching
15 ŽPierson et al., 1997.. Lahar deposition occurred
of detention ponds.
primarily on low-gradient, coalescing alluvial fans
15 to 50 km downstream from the caldera at the base
6.3.2. Protracted and worsening impact around of the volcano, where deposit thicknesses generally
Pinatubo ranged from 0.5 to 5 m. Total depositional volume
The response to large eruptions ŽG 10 km3 of on the east-side alluvial fans in 1991 was about 0.38
ejecta. had not been documented prior to the study km3 , which is almost one-third of the potential con-
of the Mount Pinatubo’s lahars. The short-term im- tributing volume from the source pyroclastic sedi-
pact around Pinatubo has been severe, but the mid- ments. Channelized lahars having peak discharges in
term impact appears protracted and worsening. the order of 100 to 1000 m3 sy1 typically were
noncohesive pumiceous debris flows, some of which
6.3.2.1. Impact and lahar occurrence. The climactic transformed to hyperconcentrated flows prior to final
explosive eruption of Mount Pinatubo on June 15, deposition. Flows range from turbulent, erosive hy-
1991, which erupted a total bulk volume of 8.4 to perconcentrated flows to viscous, usually laminar
10.4 km3, deposited 5 to 6 km3 of abundant, loose debris flows ŽPHIVOLCS-DOST-IAVCEI, 1995;
pumiceous pyroclastic-flow deposits in the heads of Pierson et al., 1997.. Lahars in 1991 to 1994 were
valleys draining the volcano and about 0.2 km3 of predominantly hot Ž508C. and steaming, fed by sedi-
J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131 123

ments eroded from the thick pyroclastic-flow de- ery is fast. Sediment yields peaked later and are
posits filling valleys in the upper reaches of the decreasing slowly in west-side watersheds, where
watersheds. Succeeding lahars in 1995–1996 were pyroclastic-flow deposits are more voluminous, nu-
predominantly cold, and consisted of increasingly merous small streams drain a broad, gently-sloping,
higher proportion of older, pre-1991 eruption de- unconfined pyroclastic apron, and vegetation recov-
posits. ery was initially low.
The prodigious sediment yield from Pinatubo has
6.3.2.3. Sediment budget and yield. The sediment also several aftermaths in terms of watershed disrup-
budget at Mount Pinatubo was evaluated by Pierson tion or piracy, channel avulsion, and blockage of
et al. Ž1992. ŽFig. 12.. In 1992, 2.3 km3 of pyroclas- tributaries. Blockage of tributaries at their confluence
tic debris Žabout 40% of the 1991 pyroclastic flows. with the main channel, either by lahars or secondary
were bound to be delivered to rivers as long-term pyroclastic flows, formed temporary lakes and im-
lahar deposits. At the end of the 1994 rainy season, poundments. Floods and cold hyperconcentrated
about 2.2 km3 has been already eroded from the flows triggered by breaching of these naturally-
1991 pyroclastic-flow deposits and deposited on the dammed tributaries provided an additional hazard at
alluvial aprons at the foot of the volcano Mount Pinatubo. Unlike rain-induced lahars, they
ŽPHIVOLCS-DOST-IAVCEI, 1995.. Owing to the can occur even in the absence of lahar-triggering
extraordinary thickness of the accumulated pyroclas- rainfall, and therefore limit the capability to warn
tic debris, occurrence of destructive lahars is ex- threatened areas Že.g., Pasig–Potrero in 1994:
pected to continue for several years. A first approxi- PHIVOLCS-DOST-IAVCEI, 1995..
mation of the potential yearly sediment budget, based
on an exponential decay model was made by Pierson 6.3.2.4. Cartographic modelling of erosion in the
et al. Ž1992. ŽFig. 13A. and was one of the primary Sacobia’s catchment. Prolonged intense rainfall as-
input towards constructing a lahar hazard map that sociated with typhoons, and geomorphic accidents,
can be utilized for long-term planning and rehabilita- such as secondary pyroclastic flow-induced stream
tion of the Mount Pinatubo area. A decay rate inter- piracy, and lake breakout events, can significantly
mediate between those of Mount St. Helens and alter the expected annual sediment delivery rate, as
Mount Galunggung was chosen for Pinatubo ŽFig. observed in the competing Sacobia–Abacan–Pasig–
13A,B.. This exponential decay model is continu- Potrero river systems ŽPHIVOLCS-DOST-IAVCEI,
ously refined as additional information became avail- 1995.. A cartographic modelling of erosion in pyro-
able through succeeding years, and lahar hazard clastic-flow deposits of Mount Pinatubo ŽDaag and
maps are adjusted accordingly. van Westen, 1996. encompasses the rapidly chang-
Sediment yields set world records during the first ing geomorphology of the Sacobia catchment on the
three posteruption years: sediment yields in 1991 eastern slope of the volcano before and during the
were on the order of 1 million m3 kmy2 ay1 , nearly eruption and for three consecutive years afterward.
an order of magnitude greater than the maximum Emphasis was given to the importance of stream
sediment yield computed following the May 18, capture as a result of erosion and secondary explo-
1980, eruption of Mount St. Helens ŽPierson et al., sions. To quantify the volumes of pyroclastic-flow
1997.. In fact, the prodigious sediment yield from material and annual erosion, five digital elevation
Pinatubo’s upper and middle slopes and the sediment models were prepared and analyzed using a GIS, and
storage capacity in the adjoining lowlands are both pre- and post-eruption geomorphological maps were
diminishing, but at mismatched rates ŽJanda et al., elaborated. A total volume of 1.78 km3 of pyroclas-
1997.. In general, sediment yields peaked early and tic flows deposited in 1991 in the Sacobia catchment
are decreasing rapidly in east-side watersheds, where covered an area of 24 km2 . Erosion rates were
the volume of 1991 pyroclastic-flow deposits is rela- calculated to be in the range of 136–219 million
tively low, deposits and streams are confined in a m3ra, that is about 5.6 to 9.1 million m3 kmy2 ay1 .
few steep-walled valleys, thin ash fall from sec- The Pinatubo case study raises at least three
ondary explosions is common, and vegetation recov- important observations ŽMajor et al., 1997; Newhall
124
J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131
Fig. 12. From Pierson et al., 1992 Žtheir fig. 6.. Schematic portrayal of transportation and distribution of pyroclastic material produced by the June 1991 eruptions of Mt.
Pinatubo. Thickness of the flux arrows and deposits is proportional to the estimated material volume.
J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131 125

Fig. 13. ŽA. From Pierson et al., 1992 Žtheir fig. 5.. Exponential decay curves fitted to decreasing annual sediment accumulation rates for
Mount Galunggung and Mount St. Helens. A decay rate intermediate between those two is chosen for Mount Pinatubo. Initial first-year
sediment accumulation rate for Mount Pinatubo is estimated. ŽB. From PHIVOLCS-DOST-IAVCEI, 1995 Žtheir table 2..

and Punongbayon, 1997.: Ž1. heavy rainfall alone 1991; Ž2. geomorphic ‘accidents’ affecting water-
was not responsible for generating the lahars in shed and channels play a significant role in redistri-
126 J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131

bution, reerosion, and redeposition of sediments. processes and behaviour of volcanogenic flows? Ž3.
These will foster more lahars for the next 5 to 10 how much and how rapidly do rates of sedimenta-
years, and more flooding beyond the alluvial fans tionrerosion fluctuate? Ž4. how quickly do disturbed
onto the densely populated plains; Ž3. beyond the catchments recover following large eruptions?
geomorphic impact of the devastating 1991 lahars, A process-oriented volcanic geomorphology
the subsequent lahars triggered by the seasonal mon- ŽThouret, 1992. should focus on Ža. measurements of
soon rains and other geomorphic ‘accidents’ had far rates of geomorphic processes that shape ephemeral
greater social and economic impact. volcanic constructs, Žb. factors that control the sedi-
mentary budget on slopes and in channels draining
active volcanoes, and Žc. parameters that refine the
7. Conclusion: key problems and volcanic hazards exponential decay model.
Our review emphasizes two major needs. First,
Several key problems in volcanic geomorphology data from different sources Žground-based observa-
are still not adequately addressed. A sound classifica- tions, statistical analyses, laboratory experiments,
tion of volcanic landforms must take into account numerical models. should be integrated, as increas-
constructional vs. erosional origin, single against ing numbers of studies attest to the close relationship
multiple factors of growth, eruption styles, and type and complex interplay between eruptive and deposi-
and volume of magma and erupted material. Labora- tional processes, character of deposits, and environ-
tory experiments and modeling should be carried out mental factors. Second, rates of geomorphic pro-
on the tectonic effect of volcanic constructs on tec- cesses acting at all scales on volcanoes and volcanic
tonic setting and magmatic system. Detailed geologic landscapes need to be measured accordingly in order
mapping, high-resolution geochronology, and com- to reinforce the process-oriented aspect of volcanic
positional data should be combined to determine geomorphology.
eruptive and constructional episodes and the instan-
taneous destruction forces that govern the life of a 7.1. Increasing number of people at risk around
complex volcano. Large-scale instability and genesis hazardous Õolcanoes
of flank failures raise two questions: Ž1. what pro-
cesses in addition to gravitation can trigger slope At least 500 million people will be living under
instability on low-angle shield volcanoes? Ž2. what the shadow of a volcano by the year 2000 ŽTilling
fundamental structural causes might lead to an edi- and Lipman, 1993.. Twice this century, large towns
fice collapse? Experiments corroborate observations have been laid waste in minutes by volcanic erup-
that the edifice itself can contribute to the weakness tions ŽSt Pierre, Martinique, in 1902 and Armero,
of its bedrock. Colombia, in 1985.. Major population centers lie just
To contribute better to volcanology, a geomor- tens of kilometers from several large volcanoes with
phologist should: Ž1. document the erosive effects of a likelihood of eruption during the next century Že.g.,
pyroclastic flows and effects of high energy relief on Napoli near Vesuvius, Seattle–Tacoma near Mount
transport and deposition of primary pyroclastic de- Rainier, Manila near Taal; Pyle, 1995.. The problem
posits, Ž2. investigate the mechanical and thermal is of wider significance, because ‘good science alone
processes involved in snow and ice melting through will not do the job of reducing volcano risk’ ŽTilling
pyroclastic flows and surges that affect snowpack at and Lipman, 1993.. Although there have been many
active volcanoes, and Ž3. determine the factors that advances in our understanding of factors leading to
influence behaviour and emplacement of debris flows the occurrence of eruptions during the past decades,
Žen masse emplacement as opposed to incremental the ability to predict volcanic events is still poor.
deposition.. Research needs range from fundamental investiga-
Volcanic geomorphology should answer four tion of the causative processes to direct scientific and
questions regarding volcaniclastic sedimentation: Ž1. engineering studies to mitigate risk. Increasingly,
how do we identify volcanogenic sediments and policy decisions are being based on a formalized
lithofacies associations? Ž2. what are the transport ‘risk assessment’ that requires a scientifically based
J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131 127

probabilistic determination of the likelihood of a Calvari, S., Coltelli, M., Neri, M., Pompilio, M., Scribano, V.,
natural hazard event occurring. 1994. The 1991–1993 Etna eruption: chronology and lava
flow-field evolution. Acta Vulcanol. 4, 1–14.
Geomorphological surveys form a logical starting Carracedo, J.C., 1994. The Canary Islands: an example of struc-
point for natural hazard zoning ŽVerstappen, 1988.. tural control on the growth of large oceanic-island volcanoes.
Process-oriented geomorphology foster primary in- J. Volcanol. Geotherm. Res. 60 Ž3–4., 225–241.
put for quantitative reconstruction of recent volcanic Carracedo, J.C., 1996a. A simple model for the genesis of large
activity, and for the development of models used in gravitational landslide hazards in the Canary Islands. In:
McGuire, W.J., Jones, A.P., Neuberg, J. ŽEds.., Volcano
long-term planning ŽRosi, 1996.. Geomorphology Instability on the Earth and Other Planets. Geol. Soc. London,
can contribute to risk assessment through two ap- Spec. Publ. 110, 125–135.
proaches ŽSlaymaker, 1996.: geomorphic hazard Carracedo, J.C., 1996b. Morphological and structural evolution of
zonation and composite risk zonation Že.g., Mount the western Canary Islands: hotspot-induced three-armed rifts
Pinatubo: Nossin and Javelosa, 1996.. Geomorphic or regional tectonic trends? discussion–reply. J. Volcanol.
Geotherm. Res. 72, 151–162.
hazards, both volcanic and non-volcanic, are identi- Cas, R.A.F., Wright, J.V., 1987. Volcanic Successions, Ancient
fied and analysed with the aid of satellite imagery and Modern. Unwin Hyman, 528 p.
and field survey. Geomorphic hazard domains are Cotton, C.A., 1944. Volcanoes as Landscape Forms. Whitcombe
established according to the capacity of each hazard and Tombs Publ., Christchurch, 416 p.
to affect geomorphic stability, the perceived people Coussot, Ph., Meunier, M., 1996. Recognition, classification and
mechanical description of debris flows. Earth-Sci. Rev. 40,
vulnerability, and the priority of geo-resource func- 209–227.
tion. A composite risk zonation, incorporating Crandell, D.R., 1988. Gigantic debris avalanche of Pleistocene
geomorphic mapping, geomorphic risk analysis and age from ancestral Mount Shasta volcano, California, and
georesource priority, is calculated. Additional risk debris-avalanche hazard zonation. U.S. Geol. Surv. Bull. 1861,
assessment and zonation requires the development of 32 pp.
Cronin, S.J., Neall, V.E., Lecointre, J.A., Palmer, A.S., 1996.
a series of scenarios ŽBlong, 1996. in which eruption Unusual ‘snow-slurry’ lahars from Ruapehu volcano, New
magnitudes, hazard types, composite risk zonation Zealand, September 1995. Geology 24 Ž12., 1107–1110.
indices, and the vulnerability of people and infras- Cronin, S.J., Neall, V.E., Lecointre, J.A., Palmer, A.S., 1997.
tructure are adequately considered. Changes in Whangaehu river lahar characteristics during the
1995 eruption sequence, Ruapehu volcano, New Zealand. J.
Volcanol. Geotherm. Res. 76, 47–61.
References Daag, A., van Westen, C.J., 1996. Cartographic modelling of
erosion in pyroclastic-flow deposits of Mount Pinatubo,
Alloway, B., Neall, V.E., Vucetich, C.G., 1995. Late Quaternary Philippines. ITC J. 2, 110–124.
Žpost 28,000 yr B.P.. tephrostratigraphy of northeast and Dam, M.A.C., Suparan, P., Nossin, J.J., Voskuil, P.G.A., 1996. A
central Taranaki, New Zealand. J. R. Soc. New Zealand 25 chronology for geomorphological developments in the greater
Ž4., 385–458. Bandung area, West-Java, Indonesia. J. Southeast Asian Earth
Anderson, S.W., Fink, J.H., Rose, W.I., 1995. Mount St. Helens Sci. 14 Ž1–2., 101–115.
and Santiaguito lava domes: the effect of short-term eruption Decker, R.W., Wright, T.L., Stauffer, P.H. ŽEds.., 1987. Volcan-
rate on surface texture and degssing processes. J. Volcanol. ism in Hawaı.¨ U.S. Geol. Surv. Prof. Pap. 1350, 2 Vols., 1665
Geotherm. Res. 69, 105–116. pp.
Beget, J.E., Kienle, J., 1992. Cyclic formation of debris avalanches Druitt, T.H., Francaviglia, V., 1992. Caldera formation on San-
at Mount Augustine volcano. Nature 356, 701–704. torini and the physiography of the islands in the late Bronze
Blake, S., 1990. Viscoplastic models of lava domes. In: Fink, J.H. Age. Bull. Volcanol. 54, 484–493.
ŽEd.., Lava Flows and Domes, Emplacement Mechanisms and Carlowicz, M., 1996. Earthquake swarm heats up Loihi ŽFall
Hazard Implications. IAVCEI Proceedings in Volcanology, Meeting Preview.. EOS Trans. Am. Geophys. Union 77 Ž42.,
Vol. 2. Springer, pp. 89–126. 405–406.
Blong, R.J., 1996. Volcanic Hazards risk assessment. In: Scarpa, Fisher, R.V., 1990. Transport and deposition of a pyroclastic
R., Tilling, R.I. ŽEds.., Monitoring and Mitigation of Volcanic surge across an area of high relief. The 18 May 1980 eruption
Hazards. Springer, pp. 675–698. of Mount St. Helens, Washington. Geol. Soc. Am. Bull. 102,
Buonasorte, G., Ciccacci, S., De Rita, D., Fredi, P., Lupia Palmieri, 1038–1054.
E., 1991. Some relations between morphological character- Fisher, R.V., 1995. Decoupling of pyroclastic currents: hazards
istics and geologic structure in the Vulsini Volcanic Complex assessments. In: Ida, Y., Voight, B. ŽEds.., Models of Mag-
ŽNorthern Latium Italy.. Z. Geomorph. N.F. Suppl.-Bd. 82, matic Processes and Volcanic Eruptions. J. Volcanol.
59–71. Geotherm. Res., 66, 257–263.
128 J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131

Francis, P.W., 1993. Volcanoes. A planetary Perspective. Oxford in a continental climate: a complex morphometric analysis for
Univ. Press, 443 pp. nineteen NeogenerQuaternary crater remnants in the Carpa-
Gabbianelli, G., Romagnoli, C., Rossi, P.L., Calanchi, N., 1993. thians. J. Volcanol. Geotherm. Res. 73, 65–78.
Marine geology of the Panarea–Stromboli area ŽAeolian Kauahikau, J., Margriter, S., Lockwood, J., Trusdell, F., 1995.
Archipelago Southeastern Tyrrhenian sea.. Acta Vulcanol. 3, Application of GIS to the estimation of lava flow hazards on
11–20. Mauna Loa Volcano, Hawaı. ¨ In: Mauna Loa Revealed: Struc-
Glicken, H.X., 1991. Sedimentary architecture of large volcanic- ture, Composition, History, and Hazards. Geophys. Monogr.
debris avalanches. In: Fisher, R.V., Smith, G.A. ŽEds.., Sedi- 92, AGU, pp. 315–326.
mentation in Volcanic Settings. SEPM, Vol. 45, pp. 99–106. Kennedy, N., 1994. New Zealand tephro-chronology as a tool in
Gregg, T.K.P., Fink, J.H., 1995. Quantification of submarine geomorphic history of the c. 140 ka Mamaku ignimbrite
lava-flow morphology through analog experiments. Geology plateau and in relating oxygen isotope stages. Geomorphology
23 Ž1., 73–76. 9 Ž2., 97–115.
Hackett, W.R., Houghton, B.F., 1989. A facies model for a Kieffer, S.W., Sturtevant, B., 1988. Erosional furrows formed
Quaternary andesitic composite volcano: Ruapehu, New during the lateral blast at Mount St. Helens, May 18, 1980. J.
Zealand. Bull. Volcanol. 51, 51–68. Geophys. Res. 93 ŽB 12., 14793–14816.
Harris, A.J.L., Blake, S., Rothery, D.A., 1997. A chronology of Kieffer, S.W., Simonds, C.H., 1995. Constraints on the rate of
the 1991 to 1993 Mount Etna eruption using advanced very erosion of high-speed volcanic flows. Volcanoes in Town
high resolution radiometer data: implications for real-time ŽRoma, September 1995.. Period. Mineral. 64, 209–211.
thermal volcano monitoring. J. Geophys. Res. 102 ŽB 4., Lecuyer, F., Bellier, O., Gourgaud, A., Vincent, P.M., 1997.
7985–8003. Tectonic control of the Tondano caldera ŽNorth Celebes, In-
Hasenaka, T., 1994. Size, distribution, and magma output rate for ´ II 325, 607–613.
donesia.. C.R. Acad. Sci., Paris, ser.
shield volcanoes of the Michoacan–Guanajuato volcanic field Lipman, P.W., 1995. Declining growth of Mauna Loa during the
Central Mexico. J. Volcanol. Geotherm. Res. 63, 13–31. last 100,000 years: rates of lava accumulation versus gravita-
Hausback, B.P., Swanson, D.A., 1990. Record of prehistoric tional subsidence. In: Rhodes, J.M., Lockwood, J.P., ŽEds..,
debris avalanches on the North flank of Mount St. Helens Mauna Loa revealed: Structure, Composition, History, and
volcano, Washington. Geosci. Can. 17 Ž3., 142–145. Hazards. Geophys. Monogr. 92, AGU, pp. 45–78.
Hildreth, W., Lanphere, M.A., 1994. Potassium –argon Lopez, D.L., Williams, S.N., 1993. Catastrophic volcanic col-
geochronology of a basalt–andesite–dacite system: the Mount lapse: relation to hydrothermal processes. Science 260, 1794–
Adams volcanic field, Cascade Range of southern Washing- 1796.
ton. Geol. Soc. Am. Bull. 106, 1413–1429. Macaire, J.J., Bossuet, G., Choqier, A., Cocirta, C., De Luca, P.,
Inbar, M., Hubp, J.L., Ruiz, L.V., 1994. The geomorphological Dupis, A., Gay, I., Mathey, E., Guenet, P., 1997. Sediment
evolution of the Paricutin cone and lava flows Mexico 1943– yield during Late Glacial and Holocene periods in the Lac
1990. Geomorphology 9 Ž1., 57–76. Chambon watershed Massif Central, France. Earth Surf. Pro-
Inbar, M., Risso, C., Parica, C., 1995. The morphological devel- cesses Landforms 22, 473–489.
opment of a young lava flow in the South Western Andes— Macdonald, G.A., 1972. Volcanoes. Prentice-Hall, NJ, 510 pp.
Neuquen Argentina. Z. Geomorph. N.F. 39 Ž4., 479–487. Macdonald, K.C., Fox, P.J., Alexander, R.T., Pockalny, R., Gente,
Iverson, R.M., 1995. Can magma-injection and groundwater forces P., 1996. Volcanic growth faults and the origin of Pacific
cause massive landslides on Hawaıan ¨ volcanoes? In: Ida, Y., abyssal hills. Nature 380, 125–129.
Voight, B. ŽEds.., Models of Magmatic Processes and Vol- McGuire, W.J., Jones, A.P., Neuberg, J. ŽEds.., 1996. Volcano
canic Eruptions. J. Volcanol. Geotherm. Res., 66, 295–308. instability on the Earth and other planets. Geol. Soc. London,
Janda, R.J., Scott, K.M., Nolan, K.M., Mattison, H.A., 1981. Spec. Publ. Vol. 110, 388 pp.
Lahar movement, effects, and deposits. In: Lipman, P.W., McKnight, S.B., Williams, S.N., 1997. Old cinder cone or young
Mullineaux, D.R. ŽEds.., The 1980 Eruptions of Mount St. composite volcano?: the nature of Cerro Negro Nicaragua.
Helens, Washington. U.S. Geol. Surv. Prof. Pap. 1250, 461– Geology 25 Ž4., 339–342.
478. McPhie, J., 1995. A Pliocene shoaling basaltic seamount: Ba
Janda, R.J., Daag, A.S., Delos Reyes, P.J., Newhall, C.G., Pier- volcanic group at Rakiraki, Fiji. J. Volcanol. Geotherm. Res.
son, T.C., Punongbayan, R.S., Rodolfo, K.S., Solidum, R.U., 64, 193–210.
Umbal, J.V., 1997. Assessment and response to lahar hazard McPhie, J., Doyle, M., Allen, R., 1993. Volcanic textures, a
around Mount Pinatubo, 1991 to 1993. In: Newhall, C.G., Guide to the Interpretation of Textures in Volcanic Rocks.
Punongbayan, R.S. ŽEds.., Fire and Mud: Eruptions and La- CODES, University of Tasmania, 196 pp.
hars of Mt. Pinatubo, Philippines. University of Washington Major, J.J., Newhall, C.G., 1989. Snow and ice perturbation
Press, pp. 107–139. during historical volcanic eruptions and the formation of la-
Kahle, A.B., Abrams, M.J., Abbott, E.A., Mouginis-Mark, P.J., hars and floods—a global review. Bull. Volcanol. 52, 1–27.
Realmuto, V.J., 1995. Remote sensing of Mauna Loa. Mauna Major, J.J., Janda, R.J., Daag, A.S., 1997. Watershed disturbance
Loa Revealed: Structure, Composition, History, and Hazards. and lahars on the east side of Mount Pinatubo during the
Geophys. Monogr. 92, AGU, 145–169. mid-June 1991 eruptions. In: Newhall, C.G., Punongbayan,
´
Karatson, D., 1996. Rates and factors of stratovolcano degradation R.S. ŽEds.., Fire and Mud: Eruptions and Lahars of Mt.
J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131 129

Pinatubo, Philippines. University of Washington Press, pp. Owen, S., Segall, P., Freymuller, J., Miklius, A., Denlinger, R.,
895–918. Arnadottir, T., Sako, M., Burgmann, R., 1995. Rapid deforma-
Marti, J., Ablay, G.J., Bryan, S., 1996. Comment on ‘The Canary tion of the south flank of Kilauea volcano Hawaı. ¨ Science 267,
Islands: an example of structural control on growth of large 1328–1332.
oceanic-island volcanoes’ by J. C. Carracedo. Discussion– Pain, C.F., Ollier, C.D., 1995. Inversion of relief: a component of
comment. J. Volcanol. Geotherm. Res. 72, 143–149. landscape evolution. Geomorphology 12 Ž2., 151–165.
Masson, D.G., 1996. Catastrophic collapse of the volcanic island Palacios, D., 1994. The origin of certain wide valleys in the
of Hierro 15 ka ago and the history of landslides in the Canary Canary Islands. Geomorphology 9 Ž1., 1–18.
islands. Geology 24 Ž3., 231–234. Peterson, D.W., Moore, R.B., 1987. Geologic history and evolu-
Mathisen M.E., McPherson J.G., 1991. Volcaniclastic deposits: tion of geologic concepts, Island of Hawaı.¨ In: Decker, R.W.,
implications for hydrocarbon exploration. In: Fisher, R.V., Wright, T.L., Stauffer, P.H. ŽEds.., Volcanism in Hawaı. ¨ U.S.
Smith, G.A. ŽEds.., Sedimentation in volcanic settings. SEPM Geol. Surv. Prof. Pap. 1350, Vol. 1, 149–189.
Spec. Publ. 45, pp. 27–36. PHIVOLCS-DOST-IAVCEI ŽCVS., 1995, International Field
Mattox, T.N., Mangan, M.T., 1997. Littoral hydrovolcanic explo- Workshop on Pinatubo Lahars and Watershed Processes, An-
sions: a case study of lava–seawater interaction at Kilauea geles City, Phillipines, October 17–21, 1995, 35 pp. Žwith
Volcano. J. Volcanol. Geotherm. Res. 75, 1–17. Abstracts..
Mendel, V., Sauter, D., 1997. Seamount volcanism at the super Pierson, T.C., 1995. Flow characteristics of large eruption-tri-
slow-spreading Southwest Indian Ridge between 578E and ggered debris flows at snow-clad volcanoes; constraints for
708E. Geology 25 Ž2., 99–102. debris-flow models. In: Ida, Y., Voight, B. ŽEds.., Models of
Merle, O., Borgia, A., 1996. Scaled experiments of volcanic Magmatic Processes and Volcanic Eruptions, J. Volcanol.
sprading. J. Geophys. Res. 101 ŽB 6., 13805–13817. Geotherm. Res. 66, 283–294.
Miller, T.P., 1994. Dome growth and destruction during the Pierson, T.C., Costa, J.E., 1987. A rheologic classification of
1989–1990 eruption of Redoubt volcano. J. Volcanol. subaerial sediment–water flows. In: Costa, J.E., Wieczorek,
Geotherm. Res. 62, 197–212. G.E. ŽEds.., Debris flowsrAvalanches: Process, Recognition,
Moore, J.G., Clague, D.A., 1992. Volcano growth and evolution and Mitigation. Geol. Soc. Am., Rev. Eng. Geol. 7, 1–12.
¨ Geol. Soc. Am. Bull. 104, 1471–1484.
of the island of Hawaı. Pierson, T.C., Janda, J.J., 1994. Volcanic mixed avalanches: a
Moore, J.G., Clague, D.A., Holcomb, R.T., Lipman, P.W., Nor- disaster eruption-triggered mass-flow process at snow-clad
mak, W.R., Torresan, M.E., 1989. Prodigious submarine land- volcanoes. Geol. Soc. Am. Bull. 106, 1351–1358.
slides on the Hawaıan¨ ridge. J. Geophys. Res. 94, 17465– Pierson, T.C., Scott, K.M., 1985. Downstream dilution of a lahar:
17484. transition from debris flow to hyperconcentrated stramflow.
Moore, J.G., Normak, W.R., Holcomb, R.T., 1994. Giant Hawaıan ¨ Water Resource Res. 21, 1511–1524.
underwater landslides. Science 264, 46–47. Pierson, T.C., Janda, J.J., Thouret, J.C., Borrero, C.A., 1990.
Moore, J.G., Chadwick, W.W., 1995. Offshore geology of Mauna Perturbation and melting of snow and ice by the 13 November
Loa and adjacent areas, Hawaı. ¨ In: Rhodes, J.M., Lockwood, 1985 eruption of Nevado del Ruiz, Colombia, and consequent
J.P., ŽEds.., Mauna Loa Revealed: Structure, Composition, mobilization, flow, and deposition of lahars. J. Volcanol.
History, and Hazards. Geophys. Monogr. 92, AGU, pp. 21–44. Geotherm. Res. 41, 17–66.
Nakada, S., Miyake, Y., Sato, H., Oshima, O., Fujinawa, A., Pierson, T.C., Janda, R.J., Umbal, J.V., Daag, A.S., 1992. Imme-
1995. Endogenous growth of dacite dome at Unzen volcano diate and long-term hazards from lahars and excess sedimenta-
ŽJapan., 1993–1994. Geology 23 Ž2., 157–160. tion in rivers draining Mount Pinatubo, Philippines. U.S. Geol.
Neall, V.E., 1976. Lahars—Global Occurrence and Annotated Surv. Water-Resour. Invest. Rep. 92-4039, 37 pp.
Bibliography, Publ. 5. Victoria Univ. Wellington, New Pierson, T.C., Daag, A.S., Delos Reyes, P.J., Regalado, M.T.,
Zealand, 18 pp. Solidum, R.U., Tubianosa, B.S., 1997. Flow and deposition of
Newhall, C.G., Punongbayon, R.S., 1997. Fire and Mud. The posteruption hot lahars on the East side of Mount Pinatubo,
Eruption of Mt. Pinatubo, Philippines. University of Washing- July–October 1991. In: Newhall, C.G., Punongbayan, R.S.
ton Press, 1300 pp. ŽEds.., Fire and Mud: Eruptions and Lahars of Mt. Pinatubo,
Nossin, J.J., Javelosa, 1996. Geomorphic risk zonation related to Philippines. University of Washington Press, pp. 921–950.
June 1991 eruption of Mt Pinatubo, Luzon, Philippines. In: Pyle, D.M., 1995. Volcanoes; reduction of urban hazards. Nature
Slaymaker, O. ŽEd.., Geomorphic Hazards. Wiley, pp. 69–94. ŽLondon. 378 Ž6553., 134–135.
Nossin, J.J., Voskuil, R.P.G., Dam, R.M.C., 1996. Geomorpho- Rhodes, J.M., Lockwood, J.P., ŽEds.., 1995. Mauna Loa revealed:
logic development of the Sunda volcanic complex, west Java Structure, Composition, History, and Hazards. Geophys.
Indonesia. ITC Journal 2, 157–165. Monogr. 92, AGU, p. 348.
Nott, J., Young, R., McDougall, I., 1996. Wearing down, wearing Righter, K., 1997. High bedrock incision rates in the Atenguillo
back, and gorge extension in the long-term denudation of a river valley Jalisco, Western Mexico. Earth Surf. Processes
highland mass: quantitative evidence from the Shoalhaven Landforms 22, 337–343.
catchment, Southeast Australia. J. Geol. 104, 224–232. Robin, C., Eissen, J.-Ph., Monzier, M., 1993. Giant tuff cone and
Ollier, C.-D., 1988. Volcanoes. B. Blackwell, Oxford. 12-km-wide associated caldera at Ambrym volcano ŽVanuatu
Ollier, C., 1995. Tectonics and landscape evolution in southeast New Hebrides Arc.. J. Volcanol. Geotherm. Res. 55, 225–238.
Australia. Geomorphology 12, 37–44. Rosenfeld, Ch.-L., 1996. Monitoring of geomorphic effects of the
130 J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131

1980 eruptions of Mount St. Helens, Washington, USA. Geo- tinuum. In: Fisher, R.V., Smith, G.A. ŽEds.., Sedimentation in
journal 38 Ž3., 321–328. Volcanic Settings. SEPM Spec. Publ., Vol. 45, pp. 59–70.
Rosi, M., 1996. Quantitative reconstruction of recent volcanic Smith, D.K., Humphris, S.E., Tivey, M.A., Cann J.R., 1997.
activity: a contribution to forecasting of future eruptions. In: Viewing the morphology of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge from a
Scarpa, R., Tilling, R.I. ŽEds.., Monitoring and Mitigation of new perspective. EOS, Trans. Am. Geophys. Union 78, pp.
Volcanic Hazards. Springer, pp. 631–674. 26, 265, 269.
Rossi, M.-J., 1996. Morphology and mechanism of eruption of Smoot, N.C., 1995. Mass wasting and subaerial weathering in
postglacial shield volcanoes in Iceland. Bull. Volcanol. 57 Ž7., ¨ and Canary Ridges as examples.
guyot formation: the Hawaıan
530–540. Geomorphology 14, 29–41.
Rossi, M.-J., Gudmundsson, A., 1996. The morphology and for- Smoot, N.C., King, R.E., 1993. Three-dimensional secondary
mation of flow-lobe tumuli on Icelandic shield volcanoes. J. surface geomorphology of submarine landslides on Northwest
Volcanol. Geotherm. Res. 72, 291–308. Pacific plate guyots. Geomorphology 6 Ž2., 151–173.
Rowland, S.K., 1996. Slopes, lava flow volumes, and vent distri- Sohn, Y.K., 1996. Hydrovolcanic processes forming basaltic tuff
butions on Volcan Fernandina, Galapagos Islands. J. Geophys. rings and cones on Cheju Island Korea. Geol. Soc. Am. Bull.
Res. 101 ŽB12., 27657–27672. 108 Ž10., 1199–1211.
Scarth, A., 1994. Volcanoes. An Introduction. Univ. Coll. London Sparks, R.S.J., Gardeweg, M.C., Calder, E.S., Matthews, S.J.,
Press, 273 pp. 1997. Erosion by pyroclastic flows on Lascar volcano Chile.
Scott, K.M., 1988. Origins, behavior, and sedimentology of lahars Bull. Volcanol. 58, 557–565.
and lahar-runout flows in the Toutle–Cowlitz River system. Stevens, N.F., Murray, J.B., Wadge, G., 1997. The volume and
U.S. Geol. Surv. Prof. Pap. 1447-A, 76 pp. shape of the 1991–93 lava-flow field at Mount Etna Sicily.
Scott, K.M., Vallance, J.W., Pringle, P.T., 1995. Sedimentology, Bull. Volcanol. 58 Ž6., 449–454.
behavior, and hazards of debris flows at Mount Rainier, Stoopes, G.R., Sheridan, M.F., 1992. Giant debris avalanches
Washington. U.S. Geol. Surv. Prof. Pap. 1547, 56 pp. from the Colima volcanic complex, Mexico: implication for
Scott, K.M., Sheridan, M.F., 1997. Gravity driven flows of vol- long-runout landslides Ž )100 km. and hazard assessment.
canic origin: avalanches, debris flows, lahars, and pyroclastic Geology 20, 299–302.
flows from dome collapse. IAVCEI General Assembly, Course Swanson, F.J., Collins, B., Dunne, T., Wicherski, B.P., 1983.
n83, Puerto Vallarta, 2 booklets, 25–26 January 1997, unpub- Erosion of tephra from hillslopes near Mount St. Helens and
lished. other volcanoes. In: Symp. on Erosion Control in Volcanic
Segerstrom, K., 1950. Erosion studies at Paricutin, state of Mi- Areas, Seattle, July 1982. Ibaraki, Japan, Public Works Re-
choacan Mexico. U.S. Geol. Surv. Bull. 965-A, 164 pp. search Institute, pp. 183–221.
Shane, P.A.R., Black, T.M., Alloway, B.V., Westgate, J.A., 1996. Tanguy, J.-C., Kieffer, G., Patane, G., 1996. Dynamics, lava
Early to middle Pleistocene tephrochronology of North Island, volume and effusion rate during the 1991–1993 eruption of
New Zealand: implications for volcanism, tectonism, and pale- Mount Etna. J. Volcanol. Geotherm. Res. 71, 259–265.
oenvironments. Geol. Soc. Am. Bull. 108 Ž8., 915–925. Thouret, J.C., 1990. Effects of the 13 November 1985 eruption on
Siebert, L., 1996. Hazards of large volcanic debris avalanches and the ice cap and snow pack of Nevado del Ruiz, Colombia. J.
associated eruptive phenomena. In: Scarpa, Tilling, R.I. ŽEds.., Volcanol. Geotherm. Res. 41, 177–201.
Monitoring and Mitigation of Volcano Hazards. Springer, pp. ´
Thouret, -J.-C. 1992. Des paleovolcans aux strato-volcans actifs.
541–658. ´
In: Lageat, Y., Thouret, J.-C. ŽEds.., Geomorphologie vol-
Siebert, L., Glicken, H.X., Ui, T., 1987. Volcanic hazards from canique. Bull. Assoc. Geol. Fra., Vol. 4, pp. 326–366.
¨
Bezymianny- and Bandaı-type eruptions. Bull. Volcanol. 49, Thouret, J.-C., Vandemeulebrouck, J., Komorowski, J.C., Valla,
435–459. F., 1995. Volcano-glacier interactions: field survey, remote
Singer, B.S., Thompson, R.A., Dungan, M.A., Feeley, T.C., Nel- sensing and modelling—a case study ŽNevado del Ruiz
son, S.T., Pickens, J.C., Brown, L.L., Wulff, A.W., Davidson, Colombia.. Steepland Geomorphology, Vol. 5. Wiley, pp.
J.P., Metzger, J., 1997. Volcanism and erosion during the past 63–88.
930 k.y. at the Tatara–San Pedro complex Chilean Andes. Tilling, R.I., Lipman, P.W., 1993. Lessons in reducing volcano
Geol. Soc. Am. Bull. 109 Ž2., 127–142. risk. Nature 364, 277–280.
Slaymaker, O. ŽEd.., 1996. Introduction: Geomorphic Hazards. Tilling, R.I., Dvorak, J.J., 1993. Anatomy of a basaltic volcano.
Wiley, pp. 1–7. Nature ŽLondon. 363, 125–133.
Smith, G.A., 1994. Climatic influences on continental deposition Trigila, R., ŽEd.., 1995. The Volcano of the Alban Hills ŽA
during late-stage filling of an extensional basin, southeastern contribution to: geomorphology, stratigraphy and volcano-
Arizona. Geol. Soc. Am. Bull. 106, 1212–1228. tectonics, mineralogy, petrology, geochronology, crustal seis-
Smith, D.K., Cann, J.R., 1992. The role of seamount volcanism in mology, gravimetry, hydrogeology, fluid geochemistry and
crustal construction at the Mid-Atlantic Ridge Ž24–308N.. J. thermalism, geochemical monitoring, volcanic hazard., Roma,
Geophys. Res. 97 ŽB 2., 1645–1658. 283 pp.
Smith, G.A., Lowe, D.R., 1991. Lahars: volcano-hydrologic events Vallance, J.W., Scott, K.M., 1997. The Osceola mudflow from
and deposition in the debris flow-hyperconcentrated flow con- Mount Rainier: sedimentology and hazard implications of a
J.-C. Thouretr Earth-Science ReÕiews 47 (1999) 95–131 131

huge clay-rich debris flow. Geol. Soc. Am. Bull. 109 Ž2., 1994. Unusual ice diamicts emplaced during the December 15,
143–163. 1989 eruption of Redoubt volcano Alaska. J. Volcanol.
Vallance, J.W., Siebert, L., Rose, W.I. Jr., Giron, J.R., Banks, Geotherm. Res. 62, 409–428.
N.G., 1995. Edifice collapse and related hazards in Guatemala. Wood, C.A., 1980. Morphometric analysis of cinder cone degra-
In: Ida, Y., Voight B. ŽEds.., Models of Magmatic Processes dation. J. Volcanol. Geotherm. Res. 8, 137–160.
and Volcanic Eruptions. J. Volcanol. Geotherm Res. 66, 337– Young, S. et al., 1997. The ongoing eruption in Monserrat.
355. Science 276, 371–372, Together with the Monserrat Volcano
Van Wyk de Vries, B., Francis, P.W., 1997. Catastrophic collapse Observatory Team.
at stratovolcanoes induced by gradual volcano spreading. Na-
ture 387, 387–390. Jean-Claude Thouret is Professor at the
Van Wyk de Vries, B., Merle, O., 1996. The effect of volcanic Universite´ Blaise Pascal ŽClermont-Fer-
constructs on rift fault patterns. Geology 24 Ž7., 643–646. rand II. and research geomorphologist at
Vandemeulebrouck, J., Thouret, J.-C., Dedieu, J.-P., 1993. Recon- UMR 6524 ‘Magmas and Volcanoes’ of
´´ ´
naissance par teledetection ´
des produits eruptifs et des lahars the French CNRS since 1990. He earned
sur et autour de la calotte glaciaire du Nevado del Ruiz the highest University’s degree from the
´ France 164 Ž6., 795–806.
Colombie. Bull. Soc. Geol. Ecole Normale Superieure´ de Saint-
Verstappen, H., 1988. Geomorphological surveys and natural Cloud ŽParis. in 1975 and has been As-
hazard zoning, with special reference to volcanic hazards in sistant Professor at the Universite´ Joseph
central Java. Z. Geomorphol. N.F., Sppl.-Bd. 68, 81–101. Fourier ŽGrenoble I, 1975–1990.. He
Voight, B., Janda, R.J., Glicken, H. ougl, Douglss, P.M., 1983. earned his PhD in 1988, that dealt with
Nature and mechanics of the Mount St. Helens rockslide- the volcanic and glacial geomorphology
´
avalanche of 18 May, 1980. Geotechnique 33, 243–273. of the Colombian Cordillera Central, focusing on the reknown
Wadge, G., Francis, P.W., Ramirez, C.F., 1995. The Socompa Nevado del Ruiz volcanic massif. He has been involved in
collapse and avalanche event. In: Ida, Y. Voight, B. ŽEds.., geomorphological and volcanological studies in Colombia, USA
Models of Magmatic Processes and Volcanic Eruptions. J. ŽMt. Hood., Indonesia ŽMt. Merapi, Kelud and Galunggung., and
Volcanol. Geotherm. Res. 66, 309–336. Peru ŽNevado Sabancaya, El Misti, Huaynaputina, and Ubinas..
Waitt, R.B., 1995. Hybrid wet flows formed by hot pyroclasts At present, he is on leave at IRD Žformerly ORSTOM., the French
interacting with snow during the 1992 eruptions of Crater Institute for Research and Development, and has been working on
Peak, Mount Spurr volcao, Alaska. In: Keith, T.E.C. ŽEd.., volcanoes in southern Peru for the past four years, in the frame of
The 1992 eruptions of Crater Peak vent, Mount Spurr Vol- a scientific and cooperative venture with the Geophysical Institute
cano, Alaska. U.S. Geol. Surv. Bull. 2139, 107–118. of Peru ŽLima..
Waitt, R.B., Gardner, C.A., Pierson, T.C., Major, J.J., Neal, C.A.,

You might also like