Tonga volcano unleashed fastest ever undersea flows: study

Phys.org   September 7, 2023
In December 2021, an undersea volcano in the southern Pacific Ocean, the Hunga Tonga–Hunga Ha‘apai (Hunga volcano) began erupting. In January 2022 the eruption reached a powerful climax, triggering atmospheric waves that traveled around the globe and a tsunami that swept across the Pacific Ocean. An estimated 75% of Earth’s volcanoes are underwater, and 20% of all fatalities caused by volcanic eruptions since 1600 CE have been associated with underwater volcanism. Yet, explosive underwater eruptions are poorly understood. An international team of researchers (UK, New Zealand, Kingdom of Tonga, Australia, USA – industry) reported that volcanic debris from the Hunga eruption traveled under the sea unprecedented distance and at record-breaking speed—more than 100 km, at velocities reaching 122 km/hour. The flow reshaped the seafloor and destroyed both international and domestic telecommunications cables. Given that 95% of global communications are carried by seafloor cables, the findings highlight system vulnerabilities to underwater volcanism… read more. TECHNICAL ARTICLE    1  ,   2  

Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

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