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Dive into the research topics where Laura E. Clor is active.

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Featured researches published by Laura E. Clor.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2016

Causes of unrest at silicic calderas in the East African Rift: New constraints from InSAR and soil‐gas chemistry at Aluto volcano, Ethiopia

William Hutchison; Juliet Biggs; Tamsin A. Mather; David M. Pyle; Elias Lewi; Gezahegn Yirgu; Stefano Caliro; Giovanni Chiodini; Laura E. Clor; Tobias P. Fischer

Restless silicic calderas present major geological hazards, and yet many also host significant untapped geothermal resources. In East Africa, this poses a major challenge, although the calderas are largely unmonitored their geothermal resources could provide substantial economic benefits to the region. Understanding what causes unrest at these volcanoes is vital for weighing up the opportunities against the potential risks. Here we bring together new field and remote sensing observations to evaluate causes of ground deformation at Aluto, a restless silicic volcano located in the Main Ethiopian Rift (MER). Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) data reveal the temporal and spatial characteristics of a ground deformation episode that took place between 2008 and 2010. Deformation time series reveal pulses of accelerating uplift that transition to gradual long-term subsidence, and analytical models support inflation source depths of ∼5 km. Gases escaping along the major fault zone of Aluto show high CO2 flux, and a clear magmatic carbon signature (CO2-δ13C of −4.2‰ to −4.5‰). This provides compelling evidence that the magmatic and hydrothermal reservoirs of the complex are physically connected. We suggest that a coupled magmatic-hydrothermal system can explain the uplift-subsidence signals. We hypothesize that magmatic fluid injection and/or intrusion in the cap of the magmatic reservoir drives edifice-wide inflation while subsequent deflation is related to magmatic degassing and depressurization of the hydrothermal system. These new constraints on the plumbing of Aluto yield important insights into the behavior of rift volcanic systems and will be crucial for interpreting future patterns of unrest.


Geology | 2016

Dissolved gases in hydrothermal (phreatic) and geyser eruptions at Yellowstone National Park, USA

Shaul Hurwitz; Laura E. Clor; R. Blaine McCleskey; D. Kirk Nordstrom; Andrew G. Hunt; William C. Evans

Multiphase and multicomponent fluid flow in the shallow continental crust plays a significant role in a variety of processes over a broad range of temperatures and pressures. The presence of dissolved gases in aqueous fluids reduces the liquid stability field toward lower temperatures and enhances the explosivity potential with respect to pure water. Therefore, in areas where magma is actively degassing into a hydrothermal system, gas-rich aqueous fluids can exert a major control on geothermal energy production, can be propellants in hazardous hydrothermal (phreatic) eruptions, and can modulate the dynamics of geyser eruptions. We collected pressurized samples of thermal water that preserved dissolved gases in conjunction with precise temperature measurements with depth in research well Y-7 (maximum depth of 70.1 m; casing to 31 m) and five thermal pools (maximum depth of 11.3 m) in the Upper Geyser Basin of Yellowstone National Park, USA. Based on the dissolved gas concentrations, we demonstrate that CO 2 mainly derived from magma and N 2 from air-saturated meteoric water reduce the near-surface saturation temperature, consistent with some previous observations in geyser conduits. Thermodynamic calculations suggest that the dissolved CO 2 and N 2 modulate the dynamics of geyser eruptions and are likely triggers of hydrothermal eruptions when recharged into shallow reservoirs at high concentrations. Therefore, monitoring changes in gas emission rate and composition in areas with neutral and alkaline chlorine thermal features could provide important information on the natural resources (geysers) and hazards (eruptions) in these areas.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2015

Hydrothermal response to a volcano-tectonic earthquake swarm, Lassen, California

Steven E. Ingebritsen; David R. Shelly; Paul A. Hsieh; Laura E. Clor; P.H. Seward; William C. Evans

The increasing capability of seismic, geodetic, and hydrothermal observation networks allows recognition of volcanic unrest that could previously have gone undetected, creating an imperative to diagnose and interpret unrest episodes. A November 2014 earthquake swarm near Lassen Volcanic National Park, California, which included the largest earthquake in the area in more than 60 years, was accompanied by a rarely observed outburst of hydrothermal fluids. Although the earthquake swarm likely reflects upward migration of endogenous H2O-CO2 fluids in the source region, there is no evidence that such fluids emerged at the surface. Instead, shaking from the modest sized (moment magnitude 3.85) but proximal earthquake caused near-vent permeability increases that triggered increased outflow of hydrothermal fluids already present and equilibrated in a local hydrothermal aquifer. Long-term, multiparametric monitoring at Lassen and other well-instrumented volcanoes enhances interpretation of unrest and can provide a basis for detailed physical modeling.


American Mineralogist | 2016

The Lassen hydrothermal system

Steven E. Ingebritsen; Deborah Bergfeld; Laura E. Clor; William C. Evans

Abstract The active Lassen hydrothermal system includes a central vapor-dominated zone or zones beneath the Lassen highlands underlain by ~240 °C high-chloride waters that discharge at lower elevations. It is the best-exposed and largest hydrothermal system in the Cascade Range, discharging 41 ± 10 kg/s of steam (~115 MW) and 23 ± 2 kg/s of high-chloride waters (~27 MW). The Lassen system accounts for a full 1/3 of the total high-temperature hydrothermal heat discharge in the U.S. Cascades (140/400 MW). Hydrothermal heat discharge of ~140 MW can be supported by crystallization and cooling of silicic magma at a rate of ~2400 km3/Ma, and the ongoing rates of heat and magmatic CO2 discharge are broadly consistent with a petrologic model for basalt-driven magmatic evolution. The clustering of observed seismicity at ~4–5 km depth may define zones of thermal cracking where the hydrothermal system mines heat from near-plastic rock. If so, the combined areal extent of the primary heat-transfer zones is ~5 km2, the average conductive heat flux over that area is >25 W/m2, and the conductive-boundary length <50 m. Observational records of hydrothermal discharge are likely too short to document long-term transients, whether they are intrinsic to the system or owe to various geologic events such as the eruption of Lassen Peak at 27 ka, deglaciation beginning ~18 ka, the eruptions of Chaos Crags at 1.1 ka, or the minor 1914-1917 eruption at the summit of Lassen Peak. However, there is a rich record of intermittent hydrothermal measurement over the past several decades and more-frequent measurement 2009-present. These data reveal sensitivity to climate and weather conditions, seasonal variability that owes to interaction with the shallow hydrologic system, and a transient 1.5-to twofold increase in high-chloride discharge in response to an earthquake swarm in mid-November 2014.


Applied Geochemistry | 2012

Solute and geothermal flux monitoring using electrical conductivity in the Madison, Firehole, and Gibbon Rivers, Yellowstone National Park

R. Blaine McCleskey; Laura E. Clor; William C. Evans; D. Kirk Nordstrom; Henry Heasler; Mark A. Huebner


Scientific Investigations Report | 2007

Systematics of Water Temperature and Flow at Tantalus Creek During Calendar Year 2005, Norris Geyser Basin, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming

Laura E. Clor; Henry Heasler


Data Series | 2012

Water chemistry and electrical conductivity database for rivers in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming

Laura E. Clor; R. Blaine McCleskey; Mark A. Huebner; Henry Heasler; Dan Mahony; Tim Maloney; William C. Evans


GSA Annual Meeting in Seattle, Washington, USA - 2017 | 2017

CHANGES IN WELL WATER LEVELS AND TRIGGERED EARTHQUAKES AFTER PASSAGE OF TELESEISMIC WAVES IN LONG VALLEY CALDERA, 2000-2017

Noah Randolph-Flagg; Shaul Hurwitz; Michael Manga; Laura E. Clor


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2016

Causes of unrest at silicic calderas in the East African Rift: New constraints from InSAR and soil-gas chemistry at Aluto volcano, Ethiopia: CAUSES OF UNREST AT ALUTO VOLCANO

William Hutchison; Juliet Biggs; Tamsin A. Mather; David M. Pyle; Elias Lewi; Gezahegn Yirgu; Stefano Caliro; Giovanni Chiodini; Laura E. Clor; Tobias P. Fischer


Geophysical Research Letters | 2015

Hydrothermal response to a volcano-tectonic earthquake swarm, Lassen, California: Volcanic Unrest at Lassen

Steven E. Ingebritsen; David R. Shelly; Paul A. Hsieh; Laura E. Clor; P. H. Seward; William C. Evans

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William C. Evans

United States Geological Survey

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R. Blaine McCleskey

United States Geological Survey

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Steven E. Ingebritsen

United States Geological Survey

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D. Kirk Nordstrom

United States Geological Survey

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David R. Shelly

United States Geological Survey

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Mark A. Huebner

United States Geological Survey

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Paul A. Hsieh

United States Geological Survey

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Shaul Hurwitz

United States Geological Survey

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