Christelle Wauthier
University of Liège
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Featured researches published by Christelle Wauthier.
Nature | 2008
Eric Calais; Nicolas d'Oreye; Julie Albaric; Anne Deschamps; Damien Delvaux; Jacques Déverchère; Cynthia Ebinger; Richard W. Ferdinand; François Kervyn; Athanas Macheyeki; Anneleen Oyen; Julie Perrot; E. E. Saria; Benoît Smets; D. Sarah Stamps; Christelle Wauthier
Continental rifts begin and develop through repeated episodes of faulting and magmatism, but strain partitioning between faulting and magmatism during discrete rifting episodes remains poorly documented. In highly evolved rifts, tensile stresses from far-field plate motions accumulate over decades before being released during relatively short time intervals by faulting and magmatic intrusions. These rifting crises are rarely observed in thick lithosphere during the initial stages of rifting. Here we show that most of the strain during the July–August 2007 seismic crisis in the weakly extended Natron rift, Tanzania, was released aseismically. Deformation was achieved by slow slip on a normal fault that promoted subsequent dyke intrusion by stress unclamping. This event provides compelling evidence for strain accommodation by magma intrusion, in addition to slip along normal faults, during the initial stages of continental rifting and before significant crustal thinning.
Geological Society, London, Special Publications | 2013
Christelle Wauthier; Valérie Cayol; Michael P. Poland; François Kervyn; Nicolas d’Oreye; Andrew Hooper; Sergey V. Samsonov; Kristy F. Tiampo; Benoît Smets
Abstract Nyamulagira, located in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo on the western branch of the East African rift, is Africa’s most active volcano, with an average of one eruption every 3 years since 1938. Owing to the socio-economical context of that region, the volcano lacks ground-based geodetic measurements but has been monitored by interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) since 1996. A combination of 3D Mixed Boundary Element Method and inverse modelling, taking into account topography and source interactions, is used to interpret InSAR ground displacements associated with eruptive activity in 1996, 2002, 2004, 2006 and 2010. These eruptions can be fitted by models incorporating dyke intrusions, and some (namely the 2006 and 2010 eruptions) require a magma reservoir beneath the summit caldera. We investigate inter-eruptive deformation with a multi-temporal InSAR approach. We propose the following magma plumbing system at Nyamulagira by integrating numerical deformation models with other available data: a deep reservoir (c. 25 km depth) feeds a shallower reservoir (c. 4 km depth); proximal eruptions are fed from the shallow reservoir through dykes while distal eruptions can be fed directly from the deep reservoir. A dyke-like conduit is also present beneath the upper southeastern flank of Nyamulagira.
2008 Second Workshop on Use of Remote Sensing Techniques for Monitoring Volcanoes and Seismogenic Areas | 2008
Nicolas d'Oreye; José Fernández; Pablo J. González; François Kervyn; Christelle Wauthier; C. Frischknecht; E. Calais; S. Heleno; V. Cayol; A. Oyen; Petar Marinkovic
We present here a brief overview of some findings and preliminary results obtained after almost three years of systematic monitoring of active volcanic areas in Africa by means of differential synthetic aperture radar interferometry (InSAR). With a database rich of more than 400 SAR scenes of Fogo (Cape Verde), Ol Doinyo Lengai (Tanzania), Nyiragongo-Nyamulagira (DR of Congo) and Mount Cameroon volcanoes, we processed more than 2000 interferograms among which we could detect significant and major geophysical processes: the first dyking event ever captured geodetically in a continental rift (Lake Natron; Northern Tanzania), the co-eruptive deformations of the Lengai, Nyiragongo and Nyamulagira volcanoes, the co-seismic displacements associated to the mb 6.1 February 3rd 2008 Bukavu earthquake as well as the identification of atmospheric induced phase delays over Fogo and Mount Cameroon volcanoes to be attributed to the seasonal oscillations of the inter-tropical convergence zone (ITCZ). These results have been reached given the abundance of data that increases the chances to capture unpredictable events, and capture them with the most favorable interferometric conditions as possible (e.g. in terms of geometrical and temporal baselines that minimized the vegetation-induced decorrelation). They provided strong scientific material as well as tools for hazard assessment.
Remote Sensing | 2015
Christelle Wauthier; Valérie Cayol; Benoît Smets; Nicolas d’Oreye; Francois Kervyn
A summit and upper flank eruption occurred at Nyamulagira volcano, Democratic Republic of Congo, from 2–27 January 2010. Eruptions at Nyamulagira during 1996–2010 occurred from eruptive fissures on the upper flanks or within the summit caldera and were distributed along the ~N155E rift zone, whereas the 2011–2012 eruption occurred ~12 km ENE of the summit. 3D numerical modeling of Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) geodetic measurements of the co-eruptive deformation in 2010 reveals that magma stored in a shallow (~3.5 km below the summit) reservoir intruded as two subvertical dikes beneath the summit and southeastern flank of the volcano. The northern dike is connected to an ~N45E-trending intra-caldera eruptive fissure, extending to an ~2.5 km maximum depth. The southern dike is connected to an ~N175E-trending flank fissure extending to the depth of the inferred reservoir at ~3.5 km. The inferred reservoir location is coincident with the reservoir that was active during previous eruptions in 1938–1940 and 2006. The volumetric ratio of total emitted magma (intruded in dikes + erupted) to the contraction of the reservoir (rv) is 9.3, consistent with pressure recovery by gas exsolution in the small, shallow modeled magma reservoir. We derive a modified analytical expression for rv, accounting for changes in reservoir volume induced by gas exsolution, as well as eruptive volume. By using the precise magma composition, we estimate a magma compressibility of 1.9–3.2 × 109 Pa−1 and rv of 6.5–10.1. From a normal-stress change analysis, we infer that intrusions in 2010 could have encouraged the ascent of magma from a deeper reservoir along an ~N45E orientation, corresponding to the strike of the rift transfer zone structures and possibly resulting in the 2011–2012 intrusion. The intrusion of magma to greater distances from the summit may be enhanced along the N45E orientation, as it is more favorable to the regional rift extension (compared to the local volcanic rift zone, trending N155E). Repeated dike intrusions beneath Nyamulagira’s SSE flank may encourage intrusions beneath the nearby Nyiragongo volcano.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2012
Christelle Wauthier; Valérie Cayol; François Kervyn; Nicolas d'Oreye
Journal of African Earth Sciences | 2010
Benoît Smets; Christelle Wauthier; Nicolas d’Oreye
Bulletin of Volcanology | 2014
Benoît Smets; Nicolas d’Oreye; François Kervyn; Matthieu Kervyn; Fabien Albino; Santiago Arellano; Montfort Bagalwa; Charles M. Balagizi; Simon A. Carn; Thomas H. Darrah; José Fernández; Bo Galle; Pablo J. González; Elisabet M. Head; Katcho Karume; Déogratias Kavotha; François Lukaya; Niche Mashagiro; Georges Mavonga; Patrik Norman; Etoy Osodundu; J. L. G. Pallero; J. F. Prieto; Sergey V. Samsonov; Muhindo Syauswa; Dario Tedesco; Kristy F. Tiampo; Christelle Wauthier; Mathieu M. Yalire
Geophysical Journal International | 2011
Nicolas d’Oreye; Pablo J. González; Ashley Shuler; Adrien Oth; Louis Bagalwa; Göran Ekström; Déogratias Kavotha; François Kervyn; Celia Lucas; François Lukaya; Etoy Osodundu; Christelle Wauthier; José Fernández
Geophysical Research Letters | 2013
Christelle Wauthier; Diana C. Roman; Michael P. Poland
Archive | 2010
Christelle Wauthier; Valérie Cayol; Francois Kervyn; Nicolas d'Oreye