'' Mt.
Fuji Should Erupt by 2015”: Ryuku University Professor Emeritus
8
January, 2013
Since
the Great Tohoku Earthquake of March 2011, scientists have been
anxiously watching the massive volcano known as Mt. Fuji for signs of
activity. In September of last year, a report was released stating
that Mt. Fuji’s magma chamber pressure had risen
to a worrisome 1.6 megapascals,
which is estimated to be higher than when it last erupted.
According
to retired professor Masaki Kimura of Ryukyu University, this and
other recent phenomena indicate an eruption of Mt. Fuji
should have taken place in 2011 with a four-year margin of error
ending in 2015.
First,
a little background on Mt. Fuji. Japan sits on the edge of a
“subduction zone” which is where one layer of the Earth’s crust
is pushed under another. In the below image, courtesy of Google Maps,
you can see the trench along which subduction is occurring around
Japan.
For map see original article
This
pushing is an ongoing process and results in part of the Earth’s
crust being pushed down into the hot magma of the Earth’s mantle.
However, because this crust is saturated with water, it mixes
differently with the magma in the mantle causing a lighter material
to rise back up through the top layer of crust.
This
rising magma then becomes a magma chamber. Here, away from the
mantle, various gases are released from the magma and accumulate.
When pressure becomes stronger than the rock containing it, the rock
pops open in a volcanic eruption.
Mt.
Fuji was formed in this manner, and the subduction which occurs
during large-scale earthquakes is believed to cause an increase in
the magma chamber. The previous 1707 eruption of Mt. Fuji is said to
have been triggered by a massive earthquake occurring near Osaka a
month before.
Prof.
Kimura believes that aside from the Tohoku earthquake there has been
an overall increase in more “normal” seismic activity around the
mountain – particularly on its northeast side.
“Magma is rising from beneath Mt. Fuji. Cracks in the crust have been growing. Some things hanging above have been falling. No one is pointing it out, but I think there is a possibility.”
By
“things hanging”, Prof. Kimura is possibly alluding to the
partial collapse of the Sasago expressway tunnel in December last
year, which killed nine. Authorities are still investigating the
cause of the collapse and no earthquake was detected at the time, but
deformation of the tunnel is speculated as being the cause.
Prof.
Kimura also mentions the rise of the water level at Lake
Sai which
is located to the northeast of Mt. Fuji. At
the time of the Tohoku earthquake, the lake’s water-level rose by
one meter. Kimura
believes that this was caused by the permafrost near Fuji’s summit
melted by rising magma.
Prof.
Kimura also claims that there have been a large number of phreatic
eruptions –
explosions of steam caused by heating of ground water from rising
magma – around the mountain. No lava is released during these
explosions, only water and rock.
However, some
say that phreatic eruptions are precursors to major volcanic
eruptions. Prior to the 1980 eruption of Mt. Saint Helens in the
US, there were numerous reports of phreatic eruptions. This is a
theory which Prof. Kimura seems to agree with.
“It looks like the danger of eruption is in the northeast corner of Mt. Fuji, but there is also a possibility of an eruption from the summit crater at the same time. Volcanic earthquakes are increasing, and their epicenters are becoming increasingly shallow.”
It
should be noted that Prof. Kimura is co-author of Fujisan No
Funka Wa Hajimatteiru! (The Eruption of Mt. Fuji Has
Begun!), a book released in June last year, as well as author of
2011’s Fujisan Dai Funka! Bukimina Itsutsu No Choko (Mt.
Fuji’s Big Eruption! Five Eerie Signs).
Also, despite
the evidence at hand it is still difficult to predict disasters like
earthquakes and volcanic eruptions with absolute accuracy.
However,
in the event of a Mt. Fuji eruption, many speculate the cost to human
life would be low due to the slow moving lava that would likely
occur. On the other hand, the cost of damage to public and private
property would undoubtedly be immense.
So
if you’re planning purchasing any property in the vicinity of Mt.
Fuji, you might want to sit on it for a while.
Source: livedoor
News via Hachima
Kiko (Japanese)
Amazon: Fujisan No Funka Wa Hajimatte Iru!
Top Image: Wikipedia
Volcano Diagram: Wikipedia
Amazon: Fujisan No Funka Wa Hajimatte Iru!
Top Image: Wikipedia
Volcano Diagram: Wikipedia
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