New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics abstracts
Emplacement of the large andesite lava flow in the Oturere Stream valley,
Tongariro Volcano, from airborne interferometric radar
N. F. Stevens
Active Landscapes Section
Institute of Geological & Nuclear Sciences
P.O. Box 30 368
Lower Hutt, New Zealand
email: n.stevens@gns.cri.nz
Abstract The prehistoric eruption of an exceptionally
large andesitic lava flow into a glacial valley on the eastern flanks of
Tongariro Volcano, North Island, New Zealand, prompts questions about its
size and emplacement behaviour. In November 1996, the area was mapped topographically
to a high resolution by the NASA TOPSAR airborne interferometric radar instrument.
The resulting digital elevation model (DEM), with a spatial resolution of
10 m and a vertical accuracy of 1-3 m, allowed the lava volume to be constrained
by two methods: from an estimation of the mean lava thickness from the flow
margins, and from low-order polynomial interpolation of the underlying valley
form. The TOPSAR DEM provided uniquely detailed measurements of the surface
features of the flow-most notably, the levees and surface folding-which show
that the lava was emplaced in one broad channel. Analysis of the surface
features, in context with the surrounding topography, shows that the surface
folding in the medial area of the flow was caused largely by the topographic
constraint. This is a previously unobserved cause of surface folding in andesite
lava flows.
Keywords Tongariro Volcano; Oturere Stream valley;
andesite lava flow; lava volume; lava surface features; NASA TOPSAR airborne
interferometric radar; digital elevation model
G01010 Received 27 April 2001; accepted 30 May 2002; published 27 September
2002
New Zealand Journal of Geology & Geophysics, 2002, Vol. 45: 387-394
0028-8306/02/4503-0387 $7.00/0 © The Royal Society of New Zealand
2002
PDF file of entire paper: Print-quality (1871K)
| screen-quality (223K)
This year's abstracts |
Journal home page |
All abstracts |
Publishing home page