Geology in the West Country
Talks, field trips and events organised by west country geological organisations are publicised on this blog. Discussion about geological topics is encouraged. Anything of general geological interest is included.
Saturday, 25 April 2026
How and Why Etna is Unusual
The Hunga-Tonga Eruption Hid its Effect
The Hunga-Tonga Eruption Hid its Effect
Saturday, 11 April 2026
Another Huge Eruption Sometime (Geologically) Soon
Another Huge Eruption Sometime (Geologically) Soon
The article describes new research into the Kikai Caldera, a largely submerged volcano Japan responsible for one of the most powerful eruptions in Earth’s recent geological history. Around 7,300 years ago, the volcano produced the Akahoya eruption—the largest known eruption of the Holocene—ejecting vast quantities of material, spreading ash across Japan and beyond, and likely devastating the ancient Jōmon population.
Although the volcano has remained relatively quiet since then, scientists have now discovered that its magma chamber is slowly refilling. Using advanced seismic techniques, including air-gun pulses and ocean-bottom seismometers, researchers mapped the subsurface structure beneath the caldera. Their results reveal a large magma reservoir that appears to be the same system responsible for the ancient eruption.
Importantly, the magma currently accumulating is not simply leftover material from the previous eruption. Chemical analysis shows it is newly injected magma, indicating an active replenishment process. This is supported by evidence of a lava dome forming within the caldera over the past several thousand years, suggesting continuous magmatic activity.
The findings provide insight into how giant caldera systems “recharge” over long timescales. Researchers propose a model in which fresh magma is gradually injected into shallow reservoirs, eventually rebuilding the conditions necessary for another large eruption. This mechanism may apply not only to Kikai but also to other major volcanic systems such as Yellowstone and Toba.
While there is no indication of an imminent eruption, the study highlights the importance of monitoring such systems. Given today’s dense populations, even a moderate eruption could have severe consequences. Ultimately, the research aims to improve understanding of volcanic cycles and enhance the ability to detect warning signs well before future catastrophic eruptions occur.
Saturday, 28 March 2026
Can Volcanoes be Connected?
Can Volcanos be Connected?
What Caused the Younger Dryas
What Caused the Younger Dryas
- A meteor strike
- Drainage from a large glacial lake, disrupting the North Atlantic Drift.
- An unknown volcanic eruption. (But not the Laacher See eruption - wrong trace elements and a bit later than the start of the Younger Dryas.)
Thursday, 26 March 2026
Down to Earth Extra April 2026
Down to Earth Extra April 2026
Saturday, 21 March 2026
Subducted Slabs - Where and How
Subducted Slabs - Where and How
Earth-Logs, one of this blogs favourite sources has come up with an interesting article which you can find HERE. It is based on THIS ARTICLE which will appear in a Nature Journal soon.
It concerns subducting plates and what happens to them. It is thought that mineral density changes are the main control, but the authors of the paper suggest that another control is viscosity changes caused by cooler slabs entering the mantle. Their paper is summarised below (by ChatGPT) and further summarised in the diagram at the bottom of this page.
This is fascinating stuff but all the evidence is gained at a distance and we will never get there. So we have to be content with speculating about phase changes and viscosity. But these are the best explanations we have for the observations we make.
Seismic tomography does not support the idea that oceanic slabs sink intact all the way to the core–mantle boundary. Instead, many slabs stall and accumulate at depths around 660 km and 1000 km. The 660 km boundary is reasonably explained by pressure-driven mineral changes (especially in olivine) that increase density and resist further sinking. However, no equivalent mineral transition explains stagnation at ~1000 km depth.
Recent research by Jing Li and colleagues proposes that variations in mantle viscosity, rather than just mineral density changes, control slab behaviour. Their combined experimental and modelling work suggests that as slabs descend, they trigger recrystallization in the surrounding mantle, reducing grain size and creating localized low-viscosity zones. These zones can either facilitate or hinder slab movement, leading to complex, uneven descent.
They identify four subduction modes depending on trench retreat speed and mantle properties:
- Slow retreat + low-viscosity patches → slabs penetrate past 660 km but stagnate at ~1000 km
- Slow retreat + uniform mantle → slabs buckle between 660–1000 km
- Fast retreat (with or without low-viscosity zones) → slabs stagnate at ~660 km
The study also suggests that older, “fossil” slabs may weaken the mantle and create low-viscosity regions that influence later subduction. These processes help explain seismic observations and imply that the mantle is highly heterogeneous.
Overall, the findings highlight that mantle dynamics are complex, with past tectonic activity influencing present-day plate motion, deep mantle convection, plume formation, and the chemical diversity of mantle-derived magmas.

