Big Plumes, Small Plumes in South America

2012 has been a fairly volcanically-quiet year (but that isn’t any excuse not to go and vote by 12/28 for the 2012 Pliny for Volcanic Event of the Year!) Case in point, many of us are so volcanically deprived that the eruption on December 22 of Copahue really seemed like a big event. It turned […]
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Terra/MODIS image of the December 22, 2012 eruption from Copahue, Chile/Argentina. Image: NASA

2012 has been a fairly volcanically-quiet year (but that isn't any excuse not to go and vote by 12/28 for the 2012 Pliny for Volcanic Event of the Year!) Case in point, many of us are so volcanically deprived that the eruption on December 22 of Copahue really seemed like a big event. It turned out to be a brief outburst, like a phreatic explosion (water-driven) according to the preliminary analysis from the SERNAGEOMIN, followed by very low level strombolian activity. However, check out the comparison of the Copahue plume (above) and the Puyehue-Cordón Caulle plume from June 6, 2011 (below), which turned out to be the opening salvo of a large magmatically-driven eruption. I've marked Embalse (Lago) los Barreales on both images to give you a sense of scale. All in all, it makes the Copahue eruption seem like small fry -- but even small eruptions like Copahue can capture one's imagination.

Terra/MODIS image of the June 6, 2011 eruption of Puyehue-Cordón Caulle, Chile/Argentina. Image: NASA

Happy Holidays to everyone from Eruptions!