Juan-Tomás Vázquez
University of Cádiz
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Featured researches published by Juan-Tomás Vázquez.
Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2017
Luis Somoza; Francisco Javier González; Simon J. Barker; Pedro Madureira; Teresa Medialdea; C. de Ignacio; N. Lourenço; Ricardo León; Juan-Tomás Vázquez; Desirée Palomino
Submarine volcanic eruptions are frequent and important events, yet they are rarely observed. Here we relate bathymetric and hydroacoustic images from the 2011 to 2012 El Hierro eruption with surface observations and deposits imaged and sampled by ROV. As a result of the shallow submarine eruption, a new volcano named Tagoro grew from 375 to 89 m depth. The eruption consisted of two main phases of edifice construction intercalated with collapse events. Hydroacoustic images show that the eruptions ranged from explosive to effusive with variable plume types and resulting deposits, even over short time intervals. At the base of the edifice, ROV observations show large accumulations of lava balloons changing in size and type downslope, coinciding with the area where floating lava balloon fallout was observed. Peaks in eruption intensity during explosive phases generated vigorous bubbling at the surface, extensive ash, vesicular lapilli and formed high-density currents, which together with periods of edifice gravitational collapse, produced extensive deep volcaniclastic aprons. Secondary cones developed in the last stages and show evidence for effusive activity with lava ponds and lava flows that cover deposits of stacked lava balloons. Chaotic masses of heterometric boulders around the summit of the principal cone are related to progressive sealing of the vent with decreasing or variable magma supply. Hornitos represent the final eruptive activity with hydrothermal alteration and bacterial mats at the summit. Our study documents the distinct evolution of a submarine volcano and highlights the range of deposit types that may form and be rapidly destroyed in such eruptions.
Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2017
Teresa Medialdea; Luis Somoza; Francisco Javier González; Juan-Tomás Vázquez; C. de Ignacio; Hirochika Sumino; O. Sánchez-Guillamón; Yuji Orihashi; Ricardo León; Desirée Palomino
New seismic profiles, bathymetric data and sediment-rock sampling document for the first time the discovery of hydrothermal vent complexes and volcanic cones at 4800-5200 m depth related to recent volcanic and intrusive activity in an unexplored area of the Canary Basin (Eastern Atlantic Ocean, 500 km west of the Canary Islands). A complex of sill intrusions is imaged on seismic profiles showing saucer-shaped, parallel or inclined geometries. Three main types of structures are related to these intrusions. Type I consists of cone-shaped depressions developed above inclined sills interpreted as hydrothermal vents. Type II is the most abundant and is represented by isolated or clustered hydrothermal domes bounded by faults rooted at the tips of saucer-shaped sills. Domes are interpreted as seabed expressions of reservoirs of CH4- and CO2-rich fluids formed by degassing and contact metamorphism of organic-rich sediments around sill intrusions. Type III are hydrothermal-volcanic complexes originated above stratified or branched inclined sills connected by a chimney to the seabed volcanic edifice. Parallel sills sourced from the magmatic chimney formed also domes surrounding the volcanic cones. Core and dredges revealed that these volcanoes, which must be among the deepest in the world, are constituted by OIB-type, basanites with an outer ring of blue-green hydrothermal Al-rich smectite muds. Magmatic activity is dated, based on lava samples, at 0.78±0.05 and 1.61±0.09 Ma (K/Ar methods) and on tephra layers within cores at 25-237 ky. The Subvent hydrothermal-volcanic complex constitutes the first modern system reported in deep-water oceanic basins related to intraplate hotspot activity.
Global and Planetary Change | 2005
Andrés Maldonado; Antonio Barnolas; Fernando Bohoyo; Carlota Escutia; Jesús Galindo-Zaldívar; Javier Hernández-Molina; A. Jabaloy; F. J. Lobo; C. Hans Nelson; José Rodríguez-Fernández; Luis Somoza; Juan-Tomás Vázquez
Marine Geophysical Researches | 2006
Andrés Maldonado; Fernando Bohoyo; Jesús Galindo-Zaldívar; Javier Hernández-Molina; A. Jabaloy; F. J. Lobo; José Rodríguez-Fernández; Emma Suriñach; Juan-Tomás Vázquez
Geo-marine Letters | 2011
Desirée Palomino; Juan-Tomás Vázquez; Gemma Ercilla; Belén Alonso; Nieves López-González; Víctor Díaz-del-Río
Ore Geology Reviews | 2017
E. Marino; Francisco Javier González; Luis Somoza; Rosario Lunar; L. Ortega; Juan-Tomás Vázquez; Jesús Reyes; E. Bellido
Geomorphology | 2016
Desirée Palomino; Juan-Tomás Vázquez; Luis Somoza; Ricardo León; Nieves López-González; Teresa Medialdea; Luis-Miguel Fernández-Salas; Francisco-Javier González; Juan Antonio Rengel
Marine Geology | 2016
Desirée Palomino; Nieves López-González; Juan-Tomás Vázquez; Luis-Miguel Fernández-Salas; José-Luis Rueda; Ricardo Sánchez-Leal; Víctor Díaz-del-Río
Geosciences | 2018
Olga Sánchez-Guillamón; L.M. Fernández-Salas; Juan-Tomás Vázquez; Desirée Palomino; Teresa Medialdea; Nieves López-González; Luis Somoza; Ricardo León
Geomorphology | 2018
O. Sanchez-Guillamón; Juan-Tomás Vázquez; Desirée Palomino; Teresa Medialdea; Luis-Miguel Fernández-Salas; Ricardo León; Luis Somoza