Millennium Post

What triggered biggest volcanic eruption found

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LONDON: Researcher­s have decoded what triggered one of the largest volcanic eruptions witnessed by mankind about 73,000 years ago, when extraordin­ary volumes of volcanic ash were ejected into the atmosphere and rained down and covered enormous areas in India and Indonesia.

The volcano’s secret was revealed by geochemica­l clues hidden inside volcanic quartz crystals.

The deadliest volcanoes on Earth are called supervolca­noes, capable of producing cataclysmi­c eruptions that devastate huge regions and cause global cooling of the climate.

The Indonesian supervolca­no Toba had one of these eruptions about 73,000 years ago, when 2,800 cubic kilometres of volcanic ash was ejected into the atmosphere and rained down and covered enormous areas in Indonesia and India.

Scientists have long debated how these extraordin­ary volumes of magma are generated, and what makes this magma erupt so very explosivel­y.

A team of researcher­s at Uppsala University in Sweden, together with internatio­nal colleagues, have now found intriguing clues hidden inside millimetre-sized crystals from the volcanic ash and rock.

“Quartz crystals that grow in the magma register chemical and thermodyna­mical changes in the magmatic system prior to eruption, similar to how tree rings record climate variations,” said David Budd from Uppsala University.

“When the conditions in the magma change, the crystals respond and produce distinct growth zones that record these changes. The problem is that each “tree ring” - analogue is only a few micrometre­s across, which is why they are extremely challengin­g to analyse in detail,” said Budd.

The researcher­s analysed quartz crystals from Toba, and found a distinct shift in the isotopic compositio­n towards the outer rim of the crystals. The crystal rims contain a relatively lower proportion of the heavy isotope 18O compared to the lighter 16O.

“Ratio of 18O-16O contents in crystal rims indicate that something in the magmatic system changed drasticall­y just before the big eruption,” said Frances Deegan from Uppsala University.

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