Vladimir Conde
Chalmers University of Technology
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Featured researches published by Vladimir Conde.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016
J. Maarten de Moor; A. Aiuppa; G. Avard; H. Wehrmann; Nelia W. Dunbar; C. Muller; Giancarlo Tamburello; G. Giudice; Marco Liuzzo; Roberto Moretti; Vladimir Conde; Bo Galle
Abstract Eruptive activity at Turrialba Volcano (Costa Rica) has escalated significantly since 2014, causing airport and school closures in the capital city of San José. Whether or not new magma is involved in the current unrest seems probable but remains a matter of debate as ash deposits are dominated by hydrothermal material. Here we use high‐frequency gas monitoring to track the behavior of the volcano between 2014 and 2015 and to decipher magmatic versus hydrothermal contributions to the eruptions. Pulses of deeply derived CO2‐rich gas (CO2/Stotal > 4.5) precede explosive activity, providing a clear precursor to eruptive periods that occurs up to 2 weeks before eruptions, which are accompanied by shallowly derived sulfur‐rich magmatic gas emissions. Degassing modeling suggests that the deep magmatic reservoir is ~8–10 km deep, whereas the shallow magmatic gas source is at ~3–5 km. Two cycles of degassing and eruption are observed, each attributed to pulses of magma ascending through the deep reservoir to shallow crustal levels. The magmatic degassing signals were overprinted by a fluid contribution from the shallow hydrothermal system, modifying the gas compositions, contributing volatiles to the emissions, and reflecting complex processes of scrubbing, displacement, and volatilization. H2S/SO2 varies over 2 orders of magnitude through the monitoring period and demonstrates that the first eruptive episode involved hydrothermal gases, whereas the second did not. Massive degassing (>3000 T/d SO2 and H2S/SO2 > 1) followed, suggesting boiling off of the hydrothermal system. The gas emissions show a remarkable shift to purely magmatic composition (H2S/SO2 < 0.05) during the second eruptive period, reflecting the depletion of the hydrothermal system or the establishment of high‐temperature conduits bypassing remnant hydrothermal reservoirs, and the transition from phreatic to phreatomagmatic eruptive activity.
Bulletin of Volcanology | 2014
José Armando Saballos; Vladimir Conde; Rocco Malservisi; Charles B. Connor; Julio Álvarez; Angelica Muñoz
Concepción is a frequently active composite volcano in Nicaragua, and is located on Ometepe Island, within Lake Nicaragua. Significant eruptive activity took place at this volcano between March and May 2010, consisting of ash and gas explosions (VEI 1–2). We compare geodetic baseline changes observed with global positioning system (GPS), sulfur dioxide flux (SO2), and seismic amplitude (SAM) data collected at Concepción during April – June, 2010, and February – April, 2011. Time series analysis reveals a remarkable correlation among the data sets during 2010, when the volcano was erupting. In contrast, the volcano was at its background level of activity in 2011 and the statistical correlation among the time series is not significant for this period. We explain the emergence of correlation among the time series during eruptive activity through modeling of the GPS data with emplacement of a magma column in an open conduit. In the model, magma rose in the conduit, between May 5 and 14, 2010, from a shallow reservoir located at ∼ 1.8 km depth. Later, between May 24 and 31, 2010, the top of the magma column descended to almost 600 m depth, corresponding to the cessation of eruptive activity. Thus, cross-correlation and an integrated analysis of these geophysical time series on a timescale of days helps to reveal the dynamics of the magma plumbing system operating below Concepción volcano.
Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2014
Alessandro Aiuppa; Philippe Robidoux; Giancarlo Tamburello; Vladimir Conde; Bo Galle; G. Avard; E. Bagnato; J.M. de Moor; María Martínez; Angelica Muñoz
International Journal of Earth Sciences | 2014
Vladimir Conde; Stefan Bredemeyer; Eliecer Duarte; Javier F. Pacheco; Sebastian Miranda; Bo Galle; Thor H. Hansteen
International Journal of Earth Sciences | 2014
Vladimir Conde; Philippe Robidoux; Geoffroy Avard; Bo Galle; Alessandro Aiuppa; Angelica Muñoz; G. Giudice
International Journal of Earth Sciences | 2016
Vladimir Conde; Stefan Bredemeyer; J. Armando Saballos; Bo Galle; Thor H. Hansteen
Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2016
Damien Vignelles; Tjarda J. Roberts; Elisa Carboni; Evgenia Ilyinskaya; Melissa Pfeffer; P. Dagsson Waldhauserova; Anja Schmidt; Gwenaël Berthet; Fabrice Jégou; Jean-Baptiste Renard; Haraldur Ólafsson; Baldur Bergsson; Richard F. Yeo; N. Fannar Reynisson; R. G. Grainger; Bo Galle; Vladimir Conde; Santiago Arellano; Thibaut Lurton; Benoit Couté; Vincent Duverger
Geosciences (Switzerland) | 2018
Melissa Pfeffer; Baldur Bergsson; Sara Barsotti; Gerður Stefánsdóttir; Bo Galle; Santiago Arellano; Vladimir Conde; Amy Donovan; Evgenia Ilyinskaya; Mike Burton; Alessandro Aiuppa; Rachel C.W. Whitty; Isla C. Simmons; Þórður Arason; Elín Björk Jónasdóttir; Nicole S. Keller; Richard F. Yeo; Hermann Arngrímsson; Þorsteinn Jóhannsson; Mary K. Butwin; Robert A. Askew; Stéphanie Dumont; Sibylle von Löwis; Þorgils Ingvarsson; Alessandro La Spina; Helen Thomas; Fred Prata; Fausto Grassa; G. Giudice; Andri Stefánsson
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016
J. Maarten de Moor; A. Aiuppa; G. Avard; H. Wehrmann; Nelia W. Dunbar; C. Muller; Giancarlo Tamburello; G. Giudice; Marco Liuzzo; Roberto Moretti; Vladimir Conde; Bo Galle
[Talk] In: 12. Gas Workshop, Commission on the Chemistry of Volcanic Gases (CCVG) - IAVCEI, 16.-24.11.2014, Atacama, Chile . | 2014
Vladimir Conde; Stefan Bredemeyer; Bo Galle; A. Saballos; J. Alvarez