Volcanological evolution of Montagne Pelée (Martinique): A textbook case of alternating Plinian and dome-forming eruptions

Montagne Pelée is one of the most active volcanoes of the Lesser Antilles arc, with two to three magmatic eruptions per millennium and an estimated magmatic production rate in the order of 0.7 km3/1000 years. Montagne Pelée is also infamous for the very large number of people (30000) killed by an eruptive phenomenon at the onset of the 1902–1905 dome-forming eruption. Active for ~550 kyrs, Montagne Pelée has undergone two major flank collapses that influenced its volcanological as well as magmatic evolution. The last one occurred at around 36 ka. Due to changes in the threshold effect following the decrease in load of the volcanic edifice due to flank collapse, there was a switch in emitted magma from generally andesitic to basaltic andesites. After 10 kyrs of intense activity, the load exerted by the new edifice once again prevented dense basaltic andesite magma from reaching the surface, whereas andesitic magmas, similar to the initial ones, continued to be emitted. All the magmas come from a common magma ponding zone at 200 ± 50 MPa, 875 ± 25 °C, an oxygen fugacity (fO2) between 0.4 and 0.8 log unit above the nickel‑nickel oxide (NNO) oxygen buffer, and melt H2O contents of 5.3–6.3 wt%. Based on comparative on-land and marine tephrochronological studies, we have reconstructed a detailed eruptive history of the volcano over the last 25 kyrs. The volcano produced a succession of Plinian-SubPlinian and dome-forming eruptions, making it a textbook case for studying this duality, which sometimes occurred during a single eruption. We identified more than 55 magmatic eruptions, with a ratio of 2/3 for dome-forming vs. Plinian eruptions. An unusual feature of this volcano is that dome-forming eruptions often start with violent, superficial and laterally directed explosions. These generate highly devastating dilute and turbulent pyroclastic density currents on the southwestern and southern flanks of the volcano, as illustrated by the seven events of this type during the first months of the 1902–1905 eruption. On the basis of the past eruptions over the last millennia, a series of scenarios can be proposed in the event of reactivation, including no magmatic eruption, a phreatic event or a magmatic eruption (Plinian or dome-forming eruption, with or without an explosive phase).

Keyword(s)

Montagne Pelee (Martinique, Lesser Antilles), Flank-collapse, Magma, Plinian eruption, Dome-forming eruption

Full Text

FilePagesSizeAccess
Author's final draft
7522 Mo
Publisher's official version
2113 Mo
How to cite
Boudon Georges, Balcone-Boissard Hélène (2021). Volcanological evolution of Montagne Pelée (Martinique): A textbook case of alternating Plinian and dome-forming eruptions. Earth-science Reviews. 221. 103754 (21p.). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.earscirev.2021.103754, https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00710/82158/

Copy this text