Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where John S. Pallister is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by John S. Pallister.


Nature | 2006

Dynamics of seismogenic volcanic extrusion at Mount St Helens in 2004-05.

Richard M. Iverson; Daniel Dzurisin; Cynthia A. Gardner; Terrence M. Gerlach; Richard G. LaHusen; Michael Lisowski; Jon J. Major; Stephen D. Malone; James A. Messerich; Seth C. Moran; John S. Pallister; Anthony I. Qamar; Steven P. Schilling; James W. Vallance

The 2004–05 eruption of Mount St Helens exhibited sustained, near-equilibrium behaviour characterized by relatively steady extrusion of a solid dacite plug and nearly periodic shallow earthquakes. Here we present a diverse data set to support our hypothesis that these earthquakes resulted from stick-slip motion along the margins of the plug as it was forced incrementally upwards by ascending, solidifying, gas-poor magma. We formalize this hypothesis with a dynamical model that reveals a strong analogy between behaviour of the magma–plug system and that of a variably damped oscillator. Modelled stick-slip oscillations have properties that help constrain the balance of forces governing the earthquakes and eruption, and they imply that magma pressure never deviated much from the steady equilibrium pressure. We infer that the volcano was probably poised in a near-eruptive equilibrium state long before the onset of the 2004–05 eruption.


IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Applied Earth Observations and Remote Sensing | 2010

Optimized Autonomous Space In-Situ Sensor Web for Volcano Monitoring

Wen-Zhan Song; Behrooz A. Shirazi; Renjie Huang; Mingsen Xu; Nina Peterson; Rick LaHusen; John S. Pallister; Dan Dzurisin; Seth C. Moran; M. Lisowski; Sharon Kedar; Steve Chien; Frank H. Webb; Aaron Kiely; Joshua Doubleday; Ashley Gerard Davies; David C. Pieri

In response to NASAs announced requirement for Earth hazard monitoring sensor-web technology, a multidisciplinary team involving sensor-network experts (Washington State University), space scientists (JPL), and Earth scientists (USGS Cascade Volcano Observatory (CVO)), have developed a prototype of dynamic and scalable hazard monitoring sensor-web and applied it to volcano monitoring. The combined Optimized Autonomous Space - In-situ Sensor-web (OASIS) has two-way communication capability between ground and space assets, uses both space and ground data for optimal allocation of limited bandwidth resources on the ground, and uses smart management of competing demands for limited space assets. It also enables scalability and seamless infusion of future space and in-situ assets into the sensor-web. The space and in-situ control components of the system are integrated such that each element is capable of autonomously tasking the other. The ground in-situ was deployed into the craters and around the flanks of Mount St. Helens in July 2009, and linked to the command and control of the Earth Observing One (EO-1) satellite.


Geological Society, London, Special Publications | 2017

New insights into Kawah Ijen's volcanic system from the wet volcano workshop experiment

Hendra Gunawan; Corentin Caudron; John S. Pallister; Sofyan Primulyana; Bruce Christenson; Wendy McCausland; Vincent J. van Hinsberg; Jennifer L. Lewicki; Dmitri Rouwet; Peter J. Kelly; Christoph Kern; Cynthia A. Werner; Jeffrey B. Johnson; Sri Budi Utami; Devy Kamil Syahbana; Ugan Boyson Saing; Suparjan; Bambang Heri Purwanto; Christine Sealing; Maria Martinez Cruz; Sukir Maryanto; Philipson Bani; Antoine Laurin; Agathe Schmid; Kyle Bradley; I Gusti Made Agung Nandaka; Mochammad Hendrasto

Abstract Volcanoes with crater lakes and/or extensive hydrothermal systems pose significant challenges with respect to monitoring and forecasting eruptions, but they also provide new opportunities to enhance our understanding of magmatic–hydrothermal processes. Their lakes and hydrothermal systems serve as reservoirs for magmatic heat and fluid emissions, filtering and delaying the surface expressions of magmatic unrest and eruption, yet they also enable sampling and monitoring of geochemical tracers. Here, we describe the outcomes of a highly focused international experimental campaign and workshop carried out at Kawah Ijen volcano, Indonesia, in September 2014, designed to answer fundamental questions about how to improve monitoring and eruption forecasting at wet volcanoes.


Bulletin of Volcanology | 2013

The influence of thermal and cyclic stressing on the strength of rocks from Mount St. Helens, Washington

Jackie E. Kendrick; Rosanna Smith; Peter Sammonds; Philip George Meredith; Matthew Dainty; John S. Pallister

Stratovolcanoes and lava domes are particularly susceptible to sector collapse resulting from wholesale rock failure as a consequence of decreasing rock strength. Here, we provide insights into the influence of thermal and cyclic stressing on the strength and mechanical properties of volcanic rocks. Specifically, this laboratory study examines the properties of samples from Mount St. Helens; chosen because its strength and stability have played a key role in its history, influencing the character of the infamous 1980 eruption. We find that thermal stressing exerts different effects on the strengths of different volcanic units; increasing the heterogeneity of rocks in situ. Increasing the uniaxial compressive stress generates cracking, the timing and magnitude of which was monitored via acoustic emission (AE) output during our experiments. AEs accelerated in the approach to failure, sometimes following the pattern predicted by the failure forecast method (Kilburn 2003). Crack damage during the experiments was tracked using the evolving static Young’s modulus and Poisson’s ratio, which represent the quasi-static deformation in volcanic edifices more accurately than dynamic elastic moduli which are usually implemented in volcanic models. Cyclic loading of these rocks resulted in a lower failure strength, confirming that volcanic rocks may be weakened by repeated inflation and deflation of the volcanic edifice. Additionally, volcanic rocks in this study undergo significant elastic hysteresis; in some instances, a material may fail at a stress lower than the peak stress which has previously been endured. Thus, a volcanic dome repeatedly inflated and deflated may progressively weaken, possibly inducing failure without necessarily exceeding earlier conditions.


Professional Paper | 2008

Plagioclase populations and zoning in dacite of the 2004-2005 Mount St. Helens eruption: constraints for magma origin and dynamics: Chapter 34 in A volcano rekindled: the renewed eruption of Mount St. Helens, 2004-2006

Martin J. Streck; Cindy A. Broderick; Carl R. Thronber; Michael A. Clynne; John S. Pallister

We investigated plagioclase phenocrysts in dacite of the 2004-5 eruption of Mount St. Helens to gain insights into the magmatic processes of the current eruption, which is characterized by prolonged, nearly solid-state extrusion, low gas emission, and shallow seismicity. In addition, we investigated plagioclase of 1980-86 dacite. Light and Nomarski microscopy,were used to texturally characterize plagioclase crystals. Electron microprobe analyses measured their compositions. We systematically mapped and categorized all plagioclase phenocrysts in a preselected area according to the following criteria: (1) occurrence of zones of acicular orthopyroxene inclusions, (2) presence of dissolution surface(s), and (3) spatial association of 1 and 2. Phenocrysts fall into three main categories; one category contains four subcategories. The range of anorthite (An) content in 2004-5 plagioclase is about An 57-35 during the last 30-40 percent crystallization of plagioclase phenocrysts. Select microphenocrysts (10-50 μm) range from An 30 to An 42 . Anorthite content is lowest near outermost rims of phenocrysts, but zonation patterns between interior and rim indicate variable trends that correlate with textural features. Crystals without dissolution surfaces (about 14 percent of total) show steadily decreasing An content outward to the crystal rim (outer ~80 μm). All other crystals are banded as a consequence of dissolution; dissolution surfaces are band boundaries. Such crystals display normal outward An zoning within a single band that, following dissolution, is then overgrown abruptly by high-An material of the next band. Swarms of acicular orthopyroxene inclusions in plagioclase are characteristic of 2004-5 dacite. They occur mostly inward of dissolution surfaces, where band composition reaches lowest An content. The relative proportions of the three crystal types are distinctly different between 2004-5 dacite and 1980s dome dacite. We propose that crystals with no dissolution surfaces are those that were supplied last to the shallow reservoir, whereas plagioclase with increasingly more complex zoning patterns (that is, the number of zoned bands bounded by dissolution surfaces) result from prolonged residency and evolution in the reservoir. We propose that banding and An zoning across multiple bands are primarily a response to thermally induced fluctuations in crystallinity of the magma in combination with recharge; a lesser role is ascribed to cycling crystals through pressure gradients. Crystals without dissolution surfaces, in contrast, could have grown only in response to steady(?) decompression. Some heating-cooling cycles probably postdate the final eruption in 1986. They resulted from small recharge events that supplied new crystals that then experienced resorption-growth cycles. We suggest that magmatic events shortly prior to the current eruption, recorded in the outermost zones of plagioclase phenocrysts, began with the incorporation of acicular orthopyroxene, followed by last resorption, and concluded with crystallization of euhedral rims. Finally, we propose that 2004-5 dacite is composed mostly of dacite magma that remained after 1986 and underwent subsequent magmatic evolution but, more importantly, contains a component of new dacite from deeper in the magmatic system, which may have triggered the new eruption.


Nature | 1992

A basalt trigger for the 1991 eruptions of Pinatubo volcano

John S. Pallister; Agnes G. Reyes


Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research | 2013

Petrological insights into the storage conditions, and magmatic processes that yielded the centennial 2010 Merapi explosive eruption

Fidel Costa; Supriyati Andreastuti; Caroline Bouvet de la Maisonneuve; John S. Pallister


Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research | 2008

Pre-1991 sulfur transfer between mafic injections and dacite magma in the Mt. Pinatubo reservoir

Andrea Di Muro; John S. Pallister; Benoit. Villemant; Christopher G Newhall; Michel P. Semet; Mylene Martinez; Clarisse Mariet


U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1750 | 2008

Plagioclase Populations and Zoning in Dacite of the 2004–2005 Mount St. Helens Eruption: Constraints for Magma Origin and Dynamics

Martin J. Streck; Cindy A. Broderick; Carl R. Thornber; Michael A. Clynne; John S. Pallister


Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research | 2005

Introduction to the Special Issue on the 2003 Eruption of Anatahan Volcano, Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI)

David R. Hilton; John S. Pallister; Rudolfo M. Pua

Collaboration


Dive into the John S. Pallister's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Carl R. Thornber

United States Geological Survey

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michael A. Clynne

University of Texas at Austin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michael C. Rowe

Washington State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

James W. Vallance

Cascades Volcano Observatory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Wendy McCausland

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Daniel Dzurisin

Cascades Volcano Observatory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David R. Sherrod

United States Geological Survey

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Heather A. Lowers

United States Geological Survey

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge