Japan Geoscience Union Meeting 2018

Presentation information

[JJ] Evening Poster

S (Solid Earth Sciences) » S-VC Volcanology

[S-VC41] Active Volcanism

Wed. May 23, 2018 5:15 PM - 6:30 PM Poster Hall (International Exhibition Hall7, Makuhari Messe)

convener:Yuta Maeda(Nagoya University), Takahiro Miwa(National research institute for earth science and disaster prevention), Yosuke Aoki(東京大学地震研究所, 共同), Takeshi Nishimura(Department of Geophysics, Graduate School of Science, Tohoku University)

[SVC41-P11] Eruption history of the Shirane Pyroclastic Cone Group (SPCG), Kusatsu-Shirane volcano, from trench survey and 14C dating: eruption ages of a crater chain and the Yumi-ike maar on the southern foot of the SPCG

*Nobuko Kametani1, Yasuo Ishizaki2, Mitsuhiro Yoshimoto3, Akihiko Terada4 (1.Graduate School of Science and Engineering for Education, University of Toyama, 2.Graduate School of Science and Engineering, University of Toyama, 3.Mount Fuji Research Institute, Yamanashi Prefectural Government, 4.Volcanic Fluid Research Center, Tokyo Institute of Technology )

The Holocene eruption history of Mount Kusatsu-Shirane, one of the most active volcanoes in Japan, was examined based on two trenching surveys and 14C dating. The summit of the volcano consists of three young pyroclastic cones (the Motoshirane Pyroclastic Cone Group, Ainomine Pyroclastic Cone, and Shirane Pyroclastic Cone Group), several small craters and crater chains, and the Yumi-ike maar. Two 3 m–deep trenches were dug on the southern and eastern foot of the Shirane Pyroclastic Cone Group.
The RH trench, located ca. 600 m south of the Yugama crater of the Shirane Pyroclastic Cone Group and ca. 200 m northeast of the Yumi-ike maar, contains seven eruption products, namely RH1–7 in descending stratigraphic order overlaying the basal debris flow deposit (RH8). The SJ trench, located ca. 800 m southeast of the Yugama crater, contains four eruption products, namely SJ1–4 in descending order overlaying the basal debris flow deposit (SJ5). Component and petrologic analyses showed that (1) RH7 and SJ4, (2) RH6-3 and SJ3-2, and (3) RH1 and SJ1 were respectively co-deposited during a single eruption episode. The white clayey RH7 (SJ4) layer comprises deposits of the largest phreatic eruption in the past few thousand years. Based on the thickness of the deposits, it is plausible that the RH7(SJ4)-forming eruption occurred at the Shirane Pyroclastic Cone Group. The RH6-3 layers are deposits of a single phreatomagmatic/magmatic eruption episode that occurred during 568–641 AD according to the 14C age of charred wood fragments. The RH6-3 layers contain deposits of a pyroclastic surge and volcanic bombs with cooling joints. Chemical compositions of juvenile volcanic bombs in the RH6, SJ3, and SJ2 are similar to those sampled at Yumi-ike maar. Consequently, it is plausible that the RH6-3(SJ3-2) is a deposit of the volcanic eruption that formed Yumi-ike maar. The RH2 layer is a deposit of phreatic explosions that occurred during 970–1022 AD based on the 14C age of the buried soil. The RH2 layer overlies the top of the funnel-shaped vent that was exposed during the trench survey. The extension of the vent wall meets the nearby northeast–southwest-trending crater chain, suggesting that the vent was a source of the RH2 deposit and played an important role in forming the crater chain. The uppermost RH1 layer comprises deposits derived from phreatic explosions that occurred around Yugama crater in 1882 AD.