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Deformation during the 1975-1984 Krafla rifting crisis, NE Iceland, measured from historical optical imagery

Authors :
Francois Ayoub
James Hollingsworth
Sebastien Leprince
Jean Philippe Avouac
Source :
Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth. 117
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
American Geophysical Union (AGU), 2012.

Abstract

We measure the displacement field resulting from the 1975–1984 Krafla rifting crisis, NE Iceland, using optical image correlation. Images are processed using the COSI-Corr software package. Surface extension is accommodated on normal faults and fissures which bound the rift zone, in response to dike injection at depth. Correlation of declassified KH-9 spy and SPOT5 satellite images reveals extension between 1977–2002 (2.5 m average opening over 80 km), while correlation of aerial photos between 1957–1990 provide measurements of the total extension (average 4.3 m opening over 80 km). Our results show ∼8 m of opening immediately north of Krafla caldera, decreasing to 3–4 m at the northern end of the rift. Correlation of aerial photos from 1957–1976 reveal a bi-modal pattern of opening along the rift during the early crisis, which may indicate either two different magma sources located at either end of the rift zone (a similar pattern of opening was observed in the 2005 Afar rift crisis in East Africa), or variations in rock strength along the rift. Our results provide new information on how past dike injection events accommodate long-term plate spreading, as well as providing more details on the Krafla rift crisis. This study also highlights the potential of optical image correlation using inexpensive declassified spy satellite and aerial photos to measure deformation of the Earth's surface going back many decades, thus providing a new tool for measuring Earth surface dynamics, e.g. glaciers, landsliding, coastal erosion, volcano monitoring and earthquake studies, when InSAR and GPS data are not available.

Details

ISSN :
01480227
Volume :
117
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........6d908a8edf03d18282ba409f9f2184f4
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1029/2012jb009140