posted on 2023-05-18, 18:00authored byCassidy, M, Watt, SFL, Talling, PJ, Palmer, MR, Edmonds, M, Martin JutzelerMartin Jutzeler, Wall-Palmer, D, Manga, M, Coussens, M, Gernon, T, Taylor, RN, Michalik, A, Inglis, E, Breitkreuz, C, Le Friant, A, Ishizuka, O, Boudon, G, McCanta, MC, Adachi, T, Hornbach, MJ, Colas, SL, Endo, D, Fujinawa, A, Kataoka, KS, Maeno, F, Tamura, Y, Wang, F
Volcanic edifice collapses generate some of Earth's largest landslides. How such unloading affects the magma storage systems is important for both hazard assessment and for determining long-term controls on volcano growth and decay. Here we present a detailed stratigraphic and petrological analyses of volcanic landslide and eruption deposits offshore Montserrat, in a subduction zone setting, sampled during Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Expedition 340. A large (6–10 km<sup>3</sup>) collapse of the Soufrière Hills Volcano at ~130 ka was followed by explosive basaltic volcanism and the formation of a new basaltic volcanic center, the South Soufrière Hills, estimated to have initiated <100 years after collapse. This basaltic volcanism was a sharp departure from the andesitic volcanism that characterized Soufrière Hills' activity before the collapse. Mineral-melt thermobarometry demonstrates that the basaltic magma's transit through the crust was rapid and from midcrustal depths. We suggest that this rapid ascent was promoted by unloading following collapse.