Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10553/48391
Title: | Erosion calderas: Origins, processes, structural and climatic control | Authors: | Karátson, Dávid Thouret, Jean Claude Moriya, Ichio Lomoschitz, Alejandro |
Keywords: | Oceanic-Island Volcanos Des-Neiges-Volcano Canary-Islands Reunion-Island La-Fournaise, et al |
Issue Date: | 1999 | Publisher: | 0258-8900 | Journal: | Bulletin of Volcanology | Abstract: | The origin and development of erosion-modified, erosion-transformed, and erosion-induced depressions in volcanic terrains are reviewed and systematized. A proposed classification, addressing terminology issues, considers structural, geomorphic, and climatic factors that contribute to the topographic modification of summit or flank depressions on volcanoes. Breaching of a closed crater or caldera generated by volcanic or non-volcanic processes results in an outlet valley. Under climates-with up to similar to 2000-2500 mm annual rainfall, craters, and calderas are commonly drained by a single outlet. The outlet valley can maintain its dominant downcutting position because it quickly enlarges its drainage basin by capturing the area of the primary depression. Multi-drained volcanic depressions can form if special factors, e.g., high-rate geological processes, such as faulting or glaciation, suppress fluvial erosion. Normal (fluvial) erosion-modified volcanic depressions the circular rim of which is derived from the original rim are termed erosion craters or erosion calderas, depending on the pre-existing depression. The resulting landform should be classed as an erosion-induced volcanic depression if the degradation of a cluster of craters produces a single-drained, irregular-shaped basin, or if flank erosion results in a quasi-closed depression. Under humid climates, craters and calderas degrade at a faster rate. Mostly at subtropical and tropical ocean-island and island-are volcanoes, their erosion results in so-called amphitheater valleys that develop under heavy rainfall (> similar to 2500 mm/year), rainstorms, and high-elevation differences. Structural and lithological control, and groundwater in ocean islands, may in turn preform and guide development of high-energy valleys through rockfalls, landsliding, mud-flows, and mass wasting. Given the intense erosion, amphitheater valleys are able to breach a primary depression-from several directions and degrade the summit region at a high rate. Occasionally, amphitheater valleys may create summit depressions without a pre-existing crater or caldera. The resulting, negative landforms, which may drain in several directions and the primary origin of which is commonly unrecognizable, should be included-in erosion-transformed volcanic depressions. | URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10553/48391 | ISSN: | 0258-8900 | DOI: | 10.1007/s004450050270 | Source: | Bulletin of Volcanology[ISSN 0258-8900],v. 61, p. 174-193 |
Appears in Collections: | Reseña |
SCOPUSTM
Citations
54
checked on Nov 24, 2024
WEB OF SCIENCETM
Citations
47
checked on Nov 24, 2024
Page view(s)
151
checked on Nov 9, 2024
Google ScholarTM
Check
Altmetric
Share
Export metadata
Items in accedaCRIS are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.