Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/121796
Title: The propagation and emplacement mechanisms of the Tenteniguada volcanic debris avalanche (Gran Canaria): Field evidence for brittle fault-accommodated spreading
Authors: Makris, Symeon 
Roverato, Matteo
Lomoschitz, Alejandro 
Cole, Paul
Manzella, Irene
UNESCO Clasification: 250621 Vulcanología
Keywords: Volcanic debris avalanche
Propagation processes
Facies
Canary Islands
Spreading, et al
Issue Date: 2023
Journal: Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research 
Abstract: The Tenteniguada volcanic debris avalanche deposit is located on the east of the island of Gran Canaria, Spain. Its internal structure is composed of a complex assemblage of extensional features and shearing structures including normal faults, horst and graben, brittle/ductile boudinage and clastic dike injections. Examination of these features in the field and evaluation of their distribution have allowed the generation of a new conceptual model for the transport and emplacement of this debris avalanche, and potentially others. In the majority of the deposit, the degree of disaggregation is low, with large portions of the original edifice preserved, although displaced by brittle deformation. Greater disaggregation is observed deeper and in the more distal section of the deposit. The findings suggest that the propagation of the volcanic debris avalanche was most likely facilitated by the normal fault-accommodated spreading and extension of the mass, with the majority of stress focused in fault zones. The greater disaggregation exhibited in the deeper and the more distal part of the deposit is likely to be due to greater stress accommodation from fault convergence and momentum transfer respectively. The abundance of competent lava lithologies and scarcity of weaker material that could be easily disaggregated is the most likely reason Tenteniguada did not fully evolve from a slide to a granular flow, and therefore generated a deposit which bears resemblance to non-volcanic blockslide deposits. Therefore, lithological properties are potentially a vital factor for the propagation mechanisms, distribution of stress and consequently the evolution of a debris avalanche from the initial collapse to its emplacement. The present study highlights the importance of dedicated field examinations of sedimentological, morphological, and structural features for providing constraints for models of debris avalanche propagation mechanisms and the factors dictating them.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/121796
ISSN: 0377-0273
DOI: 10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2023.107773
Source: Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research [ISSN 0377-0273], v. 435 (Marzo 2023)
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