Report on Piton de la Fournaise (France) — November 1988
Scientific Event Alert Network Bulletin, vol. 13, no. 11 (November 1988)
Managing Editor: Lindsay McClelland.
Piton de la Fournaise (France) New fissure eruption follows seismicity and deformation
Please cite this report as:
Global Volcanism Program, 1988. Report on Piton de la Fournaise (France) (McClelland, L., ed.). Scientific Event Alert Network Bulletin, 13:11. Smithsonian Institution. https://doi.org/10.5479/si.GVP.SEAN198811-233020
Piton de la Fournaise
France
21.244°S, 55.708°E; summit elev. 2632 m
All times are local (unless otherwise noted)
Deformation and a brief seismic swarm preceded a new fissure eruption on 14 December. Lava production from the fissure eruption that began 31 August had stopped on 12 September. Strong degassing continued until early October. Between September and mid-December, the permanent telemetered EDM (5-minute period) recorded 5 cm expansion of the summit crater, associated with fissure extension measured by strainmeters. Radial tiltmeters detected no significant changes. Seismicity remained weak until 12 November, when 25 minutes of low-energy summit seismicity was recorded, without associated deformation. Since then, discrete shallow events had increased in the summit area.
On 14 December at 0830, a seismic crisis began that included both shallow and deeper events in the summit area. Deformation indicated northward magma migration between 0850 and 0910. The seismic crisis continued until 1220, when low-frequency tremor appeared on the summit seismic station (SFR). At 1306 [but see 13:12], an eruptive fissure opened in the N part of the Enclos Caldera, ~400 m E of the August 1985 crater. Three main NNE-trending, en-echelon fissures developed between 1,900 and 2,050 m elevation, and at 1400 a fissure opened just above them.
Geological Summary. Piton de la Fournaise is a massive basaltic shield volcano on the French island of RĂ©union in the western Indian Ocean. Much of its more than 530,000-year history overlapped with eruptions of the deeply dissected Piton des Neiges shield volcano to the NW. Three scarps formed at about 250,000, 65,000, and less than 5,000 years ago by progressive eastward slumping, leaving caldera-sized embayments open to the E and SE. Numerous pyroclastic cones are present on the floor of the scarps and their outer flanks. Most recorded eruptions have originated from the summit and flanks of Dolomieu, a 400-m-high lava shield that has grown within the youngest scarp, which is about 9 km wide and about 13 km from the western wall to the ocean on the E side. More than 150 eruptions, most of which have produced fluid basaltic lava flows, have occurred since the 17th century. Only six eruptions, in 1708, 1774, 1776, 1800, 1977, and 1986, have originated from fissures outside the scarps.
Information Contacts: H. Delorme, P. Nerbusson, D. Vandamme, J. Delmond, and P. Taochi, OVPDLF; P. Bachelery, Univ de la Réunion; J. Dubois, J-L. Cheminée, A. Hirn, J. LePine; P. Blum, and J. Zlotnicki, IPGP.