Multimedia Gallery
GeoPRISMS Aleutian Islands project (Image 3)
Ninfa Bennington, a researcher from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and Summer Ohlendorf, a postdoctoral graduate student, install seismic stations inside Okmok caldera. The 6-mile-wide caldera is located in the eastern Aleutian Islands and is a topic of study for the GEOPRISMS program.
Scientists from 11 institutions are studying the 1,550-mile-long Aleutian Arc as part of the National Science Foundation's (NSF) GeoPRISMS (Geodynamic Processes at Rifting and Subducting Margins) program. The arc extends from the Alaska mainland west toward Kamchatka, Russia, and forms the northern part of the tectonically active "ring of fire" girding the Pacific Ocean basin. Many of Alaska's more than 130 volcanoes are located along the arc.
As part of GeoPRISMS, researchers will investigate the architecture, mechanics and plumbing of continental margins at subduction zones and continental rifts, including what controls geohazards such as earthquakes and volcanoes.
The researchers are conducting a geophysical survey of Okmok volcano to try and learn more about how magma forms beneath a volcano and where it is stored. They have installed an array of seismic and subsurface electrical conductivity sensors across the volcano. The earthquake waves and naturally-occurring electromagnetic currents recorded by the sensors will allow scientists to image the magma plumbing system beneath the volcano.
GeoPRISMS researchers will also gain access to volcanoes and to the seafloor below using ships. NSF's Division of Polar Programs will lend support to the project by allowing teams to share ship time aboard the Maritime Maid, a research vessel that will travel more than 800 miles along the arc and transport scientists and equipment on and off the islands. The Sikuliaq, NSF's new global research vessel operated by the University of Alaska Fairbanks as part of the U.S. academic research fleet, is also taking part in GeoPRISMS Aleutians.
"GeoPRISMS Aleutians combines state-of-the art scientific methods on land and at sea," says Candace Major, a program director in NSF's Division of Ocean Sciences, which co-funds GeoPRISMS. "The resulting knowledge can be transferred to regions around the globe that are vulnerable to similar, potentially dangerous and costly natural hazards."
[Research funded by NSF grants OCE 14-56749 and OCE 14-56710, "Collaborative Research: Magnetotelluric and Seismic Investigations of Arc Melt Generation, Deliver and Storage Beneath Okmok Volcano."]
You can read more about this research in the NSF Discovery news story Expedition to the Aleutian Islands: Geoscientists head to remote Alaska volcanoes. (Date image taken: Summer 2015; date originally posted to NSF Multimedia Gallery: Nov. 3, 2015) [Image 3 of 3 related images. Back to Image 1.]
Credit: Tim Parker, IRIS/PASSCAL
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