Mount Unzen (雲仙岳, Unzen-dake) is an active stratovolcano of several overlapping small, volcanic cones, near the city of Shimabara, Nagasaki on the island of Kyushu, Japan's southernmost main island.
Its highest peaks are Fugen-dake (普賢岳) at 1,359 metres (4,459ft) and Heisei-shinzan (平成新山) at 1,486 metres (4,875ft). The latter emerged during the eruptions of the early, eponymous Heisei era (1989–2019).
Overview
Mount Unzen (or Unzen-dake) rises in the central part of the Shimabara Peninsula, Nagasaki Prefecture. It is located on the outer ring of the Chijiwa Caldera centering on Tachibana Bay in the west of the peninsula. It consists of a total of more than 20 mountains, however, the complexity in the shape of Unzen-dake was expressed by various numbers (such as Mitake Goho/Mimine Godake as "24th peak", or Yatsuha as "36th peak"). As a result, the usage of only eight mountains (sometimes three mountains) was coined in a narrow sense, but historically it is a name that refers to the entire mountain range towering over the sea. It is often confused with the name of the oldest peak, Fugen-dake.[citation needed]
Surrounding the highest peak of Heisei-shinzan (1,483m (4,865ft)), are Fugen-dake (1,359m (4,459ft)), Kunimi-dake (1,347m (4,419ft)), Myoken-dake (1,333m (4,373ft)), Nodake (1,142m (3,747ft)), Kusenbedake (1,062m (3,484ft)), and Yadake (943m (3,094ft)). Fugen-dake and Heisei-shinzan derive magma from the Chijiwa Caldera. In other words, it is supplied from a magma chamber beneath Tachibana Bay off Obama Onsen. The main peak is Fugen-dake, but the volcanic activity from 1990 (Heisei 2) to 1995 (Heisei 7) made Heisei-shinzan, which was higher in elevation. Heisei-shinzan is also the highest peak in Nagasaki Prefecture.
Unzen originally read "onsen" in the notation of a hot spring, but it was changed to the current notation when it was designated as a national park. An army radar base was built near the summit of Fugen-dake during the Pacific War, where about 100 people were stationed.[4]
In the distance, Mt. Unzen's Fugen-dake (left) and Heisei-Shinzan peaks, the latter a lava dome that emerged during the 1990–1995 eruption, seen from Nita Pass in November 2005
Mount Unzen is part of the Shimabara Peninsula, which has seen extensive volcanism over millions of years. The oldest volcanic deposits in the region date from over 6million years ago, and extensive eruptions occurred over the whole peninsula between 2.5 and 0.5million years ago.
The origins of the Unzen complex are traced to the formation of a graben through crustal faulting. This caused parts of the peninsula to subside by up to 1,000 metres (3,300ft) below sea level and may have caused eruptive activity to localize at one site inside the graben. Eruptions of dacitic lava began from a site slightly to the south of today's Mount Unzen and migrated north over time.
The volcano rapidly grew during its first 200,000years, forming a very large cone. Later eruptions over the following 150,000years filled in much of the graben. Initially, activity was dominated by blocky andesitic lava and ash flows, changing to daciticpumice flows and airfall deposits from 500,000 to 400,000years ago. The period from 400,000 to 300,000years ago saw the emplacement of large areas of pyroclastic flow and lahar deposits; these form the major part of the volcanic fan surrounding the volcano. Beginning 300,000 to 150,000years ago, thick phreatomagmatic deposits were laid down, suggesting the subsidence of the volcano into its graben was rapid during this period.
Activity from 150,000years ago to the present has occurred at a number of sites around the volcanic complex, building four main domes at different times: the No-dake (70–150,000years old), Myōken-dake (25–40,000years old), Fugen-dake (younger than 25,000years old) and Mayu-yama (4,000years old) volcanic peaks. Fugen-dake has been the site of most eruptions during the past 20,000years and lies about 6 kilometres (3.7mi) from the center of Shimabara.
In December 1663, Fugen-dake erupted, producing lava flows that covered forest for over an extension of 1km (0.62mi). In the spring of the following year, there was a flood from the Kujuku Island crater, located on the southeastern flank of Fugen-dake at an altitude of 600 metres (2,000ft). More than 30 were killed.[5]
Unzen's deadliest eruption occurred in 1792, beginning with an earthquake in November of the previous year. On February 10, 1792, eruptions from Fugen-dake's Jigokuato crater began. Lava flows began on March 1 and continued for nearly two months. On March 22, volcanic plumes were produced, and lava also flowed out of the crater. On March 25, fumes rose and lava flowed down the northeastern part of Fugen-dake at a total length of 2.7km (1.7mi). Eventually, the east flank of the Mayu-yama dome collapsed unexpectedly following a post-eruption earthquake, creating a landslide into Ariake Bay. This caused a tsunami that killed an estimated 15,000 people. As of 2011[update] it is the worst volcanic related eruption in Japan.[6]
After 1792, the volcano remained dormant until it erupted again in November 1990. And a large-scale pyroclastic flow occurred on June 3, 1991, killed 43 people. The volcanic activity finally subsided in 1995.
Unzen Scientific Drilling Project (USDP)
In 1999, an ambitious project began at Mount Unzen to drill deep inside the volcano and sample magma in the 1990–1995 eruption conduit.[7] The project hoped to shed light on some fundamental questions in volcanology, such as why magma repeatedly travels in the same conduits despite the solidification of magma in them at the end of each eruption, and how it can lose enough gas on its ascent to erupt effusively rather than explosively.
Drilling began with test bores to assess the viability of a deep borehole. Two holes were drilled, 750 metres (2,460ft) and 1,500 metres (4,900ft) deep, and cores taken from these holes were used to better determine Unzen's eruptive history. One further 350-metre (1,150ft) deep borehole was drilled to test the methods to be used in the final drilling project.
The main drill began in 2003, starting from the northern flank of the volcano with a 440mm (17in) hole at an angle of 25 degrees from vertical. At greater depths, the direction of boring was tilted towards the conduit, reaching an angle of 75 degrees from vertical at a depth of 800 metres (2,600ft). Drilling reached 1,800 metres (5,900ft), the original target depth, without reaching the conduit, but in July 2004 at a depth of 1,995 metres (6,545ft), the conduit was finally reached. The vertical depth below the summit was 1,500 metres (4,900ft).
The temperature at the conduit was about 155°C (311°F), much lower than pre-drill estimations of 500°C (932°F) and over. This was attributed to hydrothermal circulation accelerating the cooling of the magma over the nine to ten years since the end of the eruption.
Rivers
Arie River starts at Mount Unzen and flows to the Ariake Sea.
Climate
Climate data for Mount Unzen, 1991–2020 normals, extremes 1924–present
Hoshizumi H., Uto K., Matsumoto A. (2001), Core stratigraphy of the Unzen Scientific Drilling: Volcanic History of the Unzen Volcano, Kyūshū, SW Japan, American Geophysical Union, Fall Meeting 2001
Hoshizumi H., Uto K., Matsumoto A., Kurihara A. (2004), Growth History of Unzen Volcano, Kyūshū, Japan, American Geophysical Union, Fall Meeting 2004
Sakuma S., Nakada S., Uto K. (2004), Unzen Scientific Drilling Project: Challenging drilling operation into the magmatic conduit shortly after eruption, American Geophysical Union, Fall Meeting 2004
Uto K., Hoshizumi H., Matsumoto A., Oguri K., Nguyen H. (2001), Volcanotectonic history of Shimabara Peninsula and the evolution of Unzen volcano in Southwest Japan, American Geophysical Union, Fall Meeting 2001
Uto K., Nakada S., Shimizu H., Sakuma S., Hoshizumi H. (2004), Overview and the achievement of the Unzen Scientific Drilling Project, American Geophysical Union, Fall Meeting 2004
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mount Unzen.
Unzendake – Japan Meteorological Agency (in Japanese)