| Assessment
of tephra fall hazard for Montserrat, West Indies
Dr. Costanza Bonadonna, University of South Florida
Hazardous effects of tephra fallout on Montserrat include roof
collapse, aviation threats, health hazards from respirable crystalline
silica, crop pollution, road safety and lahar generation. An advection-diffusion
model was developed to investigate tephra dispersal from dome collapses
and Vulcanian explosions, which generated most of the fallout tephra
during the 1995-1999 eruptive period of the Soufrière Hills
Volcano. Wind field, atmospheric diffusion, gravity settling, aggregation
and elutriation processes are considered. Computed isomass maps
compare well with field observations and require aggregation of
fine ash for good agreement. Probability maps were also compiled.
Individual probability maps (for individual dome collapses and Vulcanian
explosions) are based on the statistics of wind profiles and show
that fallout tephra generated by individual eruptive events on a
Montserrat scale do not cause serious damage in any area on Montserrat.
Cumulative probability maps (for a given scenario of activity) are
generated by sampling statistical distributions of wind profiles
and eruptive events over an extended period of time. They show that
persistent tephra fallout can accumulate enough material to cause
roof collapses and serious damage to vegetation in the southwest
part of the island, and minor damage to vegetation in the north,
as also confirmed by field data.
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