Geochemistry of recent hydrothermal systems of Mendeleev Volcano, Kuril Islands, Russia

2006 ◽  
Vol 88 (1-3) ◽  
pp. 95-100 ◽  
Author(s):  
O. Chudaev ◽  
V. Chudaeva ◽  
K. Sugimori ◽  
A. Kuno ◽  
M. Matsuo
Author(s):  
E. G. Kalacheva ◽  
Yu. A. Taran

Many active volcanoes of the Kuril Islands host hydrothermal systems. Their surface manifestations are represented by numerous thermal springs showing diverse chemical composition and physical-chemical parameters. Four main isotopic shifts relative to the local meteoric water line can be observed in the corresponding δD vs. δ18O diagrams. For the acid Cl-SO4 waters there is a clear mixing trend between meteoric water and volcanic vapor. The acid SO4waters demonstrate trends indicating kinetic fractionation at temperatures close to the boiling-point. Isotopic composition of the coastal springs tend to march the mixing line between meteoric and seawater. The δ18O-shift for deep thermal water is accounted to of isotopic exchange with host rock. The latitude effect revealed for meteoric waters also observed in the isotopic composition of the thermal waters.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuri Taran ◽  
Elena Kalacheva

<p>Some active volcanoes host thermal springs with ultra- (1<pH<2) and even hyper- (pH < 1) acidic waters with composition corresponding to a mixture of HCl and H2SO4 acids and with cations where Al and Fe are often the major components. Such springs sometimes are known as inferred drainages from active crater lakes (e.g., Rios Agrio at Poas and Copahue volcanoes). However, there are a number of acidic volcano-hydrothermal systems of Cl-SO4 composition at volcanoes without crater lakes.  At least ten groups of manifestation of this type are known for Kuril Islands. Several groups of acid volcanic springs including the famous Tamagawa springs are described in Japan.  Most of the acid Cl-SO4 volcano-hydrothermal systems are characteristic for island volcanoes, probably due to specific hydrological conditions of small volcanic islands. Maybe most known are coastal acid springs at Satsuma Iwojima volcano, Ryukyu arc, Japan. The accepted idea about the origin of such systems is scrubbing (dissolution) of magmatic HCl, HF and SO2 by groundwaters above magmatic conduits.  If so, the composition of acid springs must reflect the state of activity of a volcano. This review describes case histories that are known from the literature and from authors’ studies. Most of the volcanoes hosting acid systems show frequent phreatic activity. We show that  in contrast to crater lakes (Poas, Ruapehu, Copahue, White Island), acid springs on slopes of active volcanoes generally do not response on the preparing or ongoing volcanic eruptions. The aquifers and flow paths of the acid waters in volcanic edifices can be not associated with active conduits but with other degassing magmatic bodies and/or with deeper aquifers. One of the examples of such a complicated system is Ebeko volcano with Yuryevskye springs in Kuril Islands. These springs have a hydrochemical record since 1950s, and during this period Ebeko volcano had at least 10 strong phreatic eruptions.</p>


2019 ◽  
Vol 98 ◽  
pp. 12008
Author(s):  
Elena Kalacheva

Many active and dormant volcanoes of the Kuril Islands host hydrothermal systems which discharge acid to ultra-acid SO4-Cl (Cl-SO4) and SO4 waters. On some island, hot near-neutral Na-Cl waters can be found discharging in coastal hot springs. Four main different isotopic shifts relative to the local meteoric water line can be observed in the corresponding δD vs. δ18O diagram. For the acid Cl-SO4 waters discharging within thermal fields on volcano slopes, there is a clear mixing trend between meteoric water and volcanic vapor. Steam-heated SO4 waters demonstrate trends indicating kinetic fractionation at temperatures close to the boiling-point. For the coastal springs, the trend is apparently a mixing line between meteoric and seawater. The δ18O-shift for deep thermal waters is related to isotopic exchange with host rock but there is also a clear latitude effect in the isotopic composition of the meteoric endmember.


2006 ◽  
Vol 25 (S1) ◽  
pp. 211-211
Author(s):  
Oleg Chudaev ◽  
Valentina Chudaeva ◽  
Kenji Sugimori ◽  
Akihito Kuno ◽  
Motoyuki Matsuo

2020 ◽  
Vol 64 (4) ◽  
pp. 423-434
Author(s):  
Grishchenko M.Y. ◽  
◽  
Shishkin V.S. ◽  
◽  
◽  
...  

Рассмотрены результаты продолжавшихся несколько лет работ по детальному геоморфологическому картографированию участка заповедника «Курильский», остров Кунашир, Большая Курильская гряда. Слабо изученная и труднодоступная территория обследована с применением методов полевых геоморфологических исследований и полевых методов дешифрирования космических снимков. В результате этой работы собран обширный полевой материал о рельефе южной части острова Кунашир, который проанализирован и обобщён в форме серии крупномасштабных геоморфологических карт. Ранее на рассматриваемую территорию карты такого масштаба и такой тематики не создавались


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