Abstract
Lava-water interactions (LWIs) are rarely considered in lava flow
hazard assessments or emergency planning scenarios, though they can
generate a range of secondary hazards, including tephra blasts, rootless
eruptions, disruption to water supplies, and flooding. These hazards may
endanger life, damage property, and hinder evacuation or rescue efforts,
so identifying the signs of LWI in the products of past eruptions may
help emergency planners identify potential hazards for future eruptions.
The physical products of LWI, such as abundant hyaloclastite, high
proportions of fine ash, lava pillows, and irregular columnar jointing,
have long been recognized in the field. However, remote sensing offers
the opportunity to assess whole lava fields relatively quickly and
cheaply, and allows investigation of inaccessible lava fields and
planetary volcanism. In addition, the large-scale view can reveal
features that are not immediately visible in the field, and tools like
LiDAR can be used to strip away vegetation to show hidden morphology and
structure. We present features indicative of LWI that can be identified
by remote sensing techniques and discuss what they can and can’t tell us
about LWI in past eruptions. We illustrate these with data from the
well-documented 1783-84 Laki fissure eruption, supplemented with other
case studies from Iceland, Hawai’i and the Pacific NW. In particular,
the size, type and spacing of rootless cones can tell us about the
availability of water and intensity of rootless eruptions. When examined
in conjunction with lava flow morphology and local topography, we can
learn about the local lava flux and the likely water sources and
pre-eruptive landscape. In the absence of rootless cones, dendritic
textures on the lava flow surface may indicate passive LWI. These
textures are found across the Laki lava field, commonly in areas where
the lava encountered rivers or floods, and match those at other lava
basaltic flows known to have interacted with water, including the 2018
eruption of Kilauea. Together, these features are useful indicators for
identifying and interpreting past LWIs, both as a complement to field
observations and when field studies are not feasible.