Mt. Erebus, Ross Island, Antarctica, is currently the
most active volcano in Antarctica. The summit of Mt. Erebus contains
a persistent convecting lava lake which undergoes several strombolian
style eruptions daily. Within the past year, small ash eruptions and
even a small lava flow have also been observed coming from vents near
the lava lake.
Mt. Erebus (3794 meters above sea level) is classified
as a polygenetic stratovolcano. The composition of the current eruptive
activity on Mt. Erebus is anorthoclase-phyric tephriphonolite and phonolite,
which constitute the bulk of exposed lava flow on the volcano. The oldest
eruptive products from Mt. Erebus consist of relatively undifferentiated
and non-viscous basanitic lavas that form the low, broad platform shield
of the Erebus edifice. Slightly younger basanites and phonotephrite
lavas crop out on Fang Ridge, an eroded remnant of an early Erebus volcano
and at other isolated locations on the flanks of the Mt. Erebus edifice.
Lava flows of more viscous phonotephrite, tephriphonolite
and trachyte are erupted after the basanites. The upper slopes of Mt.
Erebus are dominated by steeply dipping (~30°) tephriphonolite lava
flows with large scale flow levees. A conspicuous break in slope at
approximately 3200 meters is a summit plateau representing a caldera.
The summit caldera itself is filled with small volume tephriphonolite
and phonolite lava flows. In the center of the of the summit caldera
is a small, steep-sided cone composed primarily of decomposed lava bombs
and a lag deposit of anorthoclase crystals. It is within this summit
cone that the active lava lake continuously degasses and periodically
erupts.
CAVEAT: Despite the database of information on
the geology of Mt. Erebus, there is still much to be learned about the
volcano. The relative lack of knowledge becomes apparent when Mt. Erebus
is stacked up against other active volcanoes of the world. There are
many reasons for this comparative lack of knowledge, including the scarcity
of rock exposures due to snow and ice cover, the remoteness of the volcano,
the extreme environment, the brief field season (<6 weeks per year)
and its non-threatening nature (i.e. no large populations are in jeopardy
because of Mt. Erebus, unlike Vesuvius in Italy or Popocatepetl in Mexico).
Despite the above factors limiting the Mt. Erebus knowledge
base, clearly much has been learned about the volcano over the past
25+ years. Nearly all exposed lava flow sets on Mt. Erebus have been
physically sampled. Nearly all of these have been examined petrographically
and petrologically. The summit lava flows on Mt. Erebus have been extensively
mapped and dated by the 40Ar/39Ar method. The
flank flows have been mapped in less detail, but many have also been
dated. Tephra from Mt. Erebus has been found in glaciers on the volcano,
mapped, geochemically examined and dated. The morphological characteristics
of the edifice have been combined with the geochronological data to
provide an evolutionary history of Mt. Erebus. And the physical and
eruptive characteristics of the summit lava lake has been observed nearly
every year for the past 25 years.
The following pages will hopefully provide you with an idea of the science
that has been conducted at Mt. Erebus.