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Dive into the research topics where Erouscilla P. Joseph is active.

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Featured researches published by Erouscilla P. Joseph.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2010

Insights into processes and deposits of hazardous vulcanian explosions at Soufrière Hills Volcano during 2008 and 2009 (Montserrat, West Indies)

J.-C. Komorowski; Yoann Legendre; T. Christopher; M. Bernstein; R. Stewart; Erouscilla P. Joseph; Nicolas Fournier; Lauriane Chardot; Anthony Finizola; G. Wadge; Racquel Syers; Carlisle Williams; V. Bass

During the Soufriere Hills eruption, vulcanian explosions have generally occurred 1) in episodic cycles; 2) isolated during pauses in extrusion, and 3) after major collapses of the dome. In a different eruptive context, significant vulcanian explosions occurred on 29 July 2008, 3 December 2008, and 3 January 2009. Deposits are pumiceous except for the 3 December event. We reconstructed the dispersal pattern of the deposits and their textural characteristics to evaluate erupted volume and vesicularity of the magma at fragmentation. We discuss the implications of these explosions in terms of eruptive processes and chronology, and the hazards posed by their sudden and often unheralded occurrence. We suggest that overpressurization of the conduit can develop over time-scales of months to weeks by a process of self-sealing of conduit walls and/or the cooling dome by silica polymorphs. This work provides new insights for understanding the generation of hazardous vulcanian explosions at andesitic volcanoes.


Archive | 2017

Fluid Geochemistry and Volcanic Unrest: Dissolving the Haze in Time and Space

Dmitri Rouwet; Silvana Hidalgo; Erouscilla P. Joseph; Gino González-Ilama

The heat and gas released by a degassing magma affects the overlying predominantly meteoric aquifers to form magmatic-hydrothermal systems inside the solid body of a volcano. This chapter reviews how fluid geochemical signals help to track the evolution throughout the various stages of volcanic unrest. A direct view into a degassing magma is possible at open-conduit degassing volcanoes. Nevertheless, in most cases gas is trapped (i.e. scrubbed) by abundant water, leading to the loss of the pure signal the magma ideally provides. Deciphering how magmatic gas rises through, reacts, and re-equilibrates with the liquids in the magmatic-hydrothermal system in time and space is the only way to trace back to the pure signal. The most indicative magmatic gas species (CO2, SO2–H2S, HCl and HF) are released as a function of their solubility in magma. The less soluble gas species are released early from a magma at higher pressure conditions (CO2) (deeper), whereas the more soluble species are released later, at lower pressures (SO2, HCl and HF) (shallower depth). When these gases hit the water during their rise towards the surface, they will be more or less scrubbed. Depending on the chemical equilibria inside the magmatic-hydrothermal system (e.g. SO2–H2S conversion, acidity), the gas that eventually reaches the surface will carry the history of its rise from bottom to top. Tracking volcanic unrest implies a time frame; the kinetics of magma degassing throughout the liquid cocktail inside the volcano impose the maximum resolution the volcano provides and hence the monitoring time window to be adopted for each volcano. Gas-dominated systems are “faster” and require a higher monitoring frequency, water-dominated systems are slower and require a lower monitoring frequency.


Bulletin of Volcanology | 2017

Phreatic activity and hydrothermal alteration in the Valley of Desolation, Dominica, Lesser Antilles

Klaus Mayer; Bettina Scheu; Tim I. Yilmaz; Cristian Montanaro; H. Albert Gilg; Stefanie Rott; Erouscilla P. Joseph; Donald B. Dingwell

Phreatic eruptions are possibly the most dramatic surface expressions of hydrothermal activity, and they remain poorly understood. The near absence of precursory signals makes phreatic eruptions unpredictable with respect to both time and magnitude. The Valley of Desolation (VoD), Dominica, located close to the Boiling Lake, the second largest high-temperature volcanic crater lake in the world, hosts vigorous hydrothermal activity with hot springs, mud pools, fumaroles, and steaming ground. A phreatic or phreatomagmatic eruption from this site is considered to be the most likely scenario for future volcanic activity on Dominica. Yet there is little information regarding the trigger mechanisms and eruption processes of explosive events at this active hydrothermal center, and only a very small number of studies have investigated hydrothermal activity in the VoD. We therefore conducted two field campaigns in the VoD to map hydrothermal activity and its surficial phenomena. We also investigated alteration processes and their effects on degassing and phreatic eruption processes. We collected in situ petrophysical properties of clay-rich unconsolidated samples, and together with consolidated rock samples, we investigated the range of supergene and hydrothermal alteration in the laboratory. In addition, we performed rapid decompression experiments on unconsolidated soil samples. Our results show that alteration leads to an increasing abundance of clay minerals and a decrease in both strength and permeability of the rocks. In the immediate vicinity of degassing acid-sulfate fluids, advanced argillic alteration yields a mineral zoning which is influenced by meteoric water. The water-saturated basal zone is dominated by kaolinite run 0whereas alunite formation is favored at and above the groundwater table where atmospheric oxidation of H2S to H2SO4 occurs (e.g., steam-heated alteration). Alteration effects may in turn inhibit degassing at the surface, increasing the potential for pressurization in the subsurface and thus lead to phreatic eruptions. Rapid decompression experiments, together with ballistic trajectory calculations, constrain estimates of the conditions prior to the 1997 small-scale phreatic event in the VoD. The results presented here may serve as a contribution to the understanding of the hazard potential of ongoing hydrothermal activity within the VoD. On a broader perspective, our results will help evaluate hydrothermal activity in similar areas worldwide which might also have the potential for phreatic eruptions, for instance Poas (Costa Rica) or Tongariro and Waimangu (New Zealand).


Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research | 2013

Chemical and isotopic characteristics of geothermal fluids from Sulphur Springs, Saint Lucia

Erouscilla P. Joseph; Nicolas Fournier; Jan M. Lindsay; Richard Robertson; Denise M. Beckles


Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research | 2015

An evaluation of ambient sulphur dioxide concentrations from passive degassing of the Sulphur Springs, Saint Lucia geothermal system: Implications for human health

Erouscilla P. Joseph; Denise M. Beckles; Leonette Cox; Viveka Jackson; Dominic Alexander


Chemical Geology | 2018

Extreme alteration in an acid-sulphate geothermal field: Sulphur Springs, Saint Lucia

Timothy J. Barrett; Erouscilla P. Joseph


World Academy of Science, Engineering and Technology, International Journal of Physical and Mathematical Sciences | 2015

Development, Testing, and Application of a Low-Cost Technology Sulphur Dioxide Monitor as a Tool for use in a Volcanic Emissions Monitoring Network

Viveka Jackson; Erouscilla P. Joseph; Denise M. Beckles; T. Christopher


2015 AGU Fall Meeting | 2015

A Collaborative Approach to Monitoring Ambient Volcanogenic Pollution at Sulphur Springs, Saint Lucia.

Erouscilla P. Joseph


2014 AGU Fall Meeting | 2014

Monitoring Persistent Volcanic Emissions from Sulphur Springs, Saint Lucia: A Community Approach to Disaster Risk Reduction

Erouscilla P. Joseph


Fuel and Energy Abstracts | 2011

Gas and water geochemistry of geothermal systems in Dominica, Lesser Antilles island arc

Erouscilla P. Joseph; Nicolas Fournier; Jan M. Lindsay; Tobias P. Fischer

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Denise M. Beckles

University of the West Indies

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Nicolas Fournier

University of the West Indies

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T. Christopher

Montserrat Volcano Observatory

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R. Stewart

University of the West Indies

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Viveka Jackson

University of the West Indies

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Carlisle Williams

Montserrat Volcano Observatory

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J.-C. Komorowski

Montserrat Volcano Observatory

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Lauriane Chardot

Montserrat Volcano Observatory

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Racquel Syers

Montserrat Volcano Observatory

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