A
Asta Miklius
Researcher at United States Geological Survey
Publications - 55
Citations - 3395
Asta Miklius is an academic researcher from United States Geological Survey. The author has contributed to research in topics: Volcano & Rift zone. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 55 publications receiving 2964 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The 2018 rift eruption and summit collapse of Kīlauea Volcano
Christina A. Neal,S. R. Brantley,Loren Antolik,J. L. Babb,Matthew K. Burgess,K. Calles,M. Cappos,Jefferson C. Chang,S. Conway,Liliana G. DeSmither,P. Dotray,Tamar Elias,P. Fukunaga,S. Fuke,Ingrid A. Johanson,Kevan Kamibayashi,James P. Kauahikaua,R. L. Lee,S. Pekalib,Asta Miklius,W. Million,C. J. Moniz,Patricia A. Nadeau,Paul G. Okubo,Carolyn Parcheta,Matthew R. Patrick,B. Shiro,Donald A. Swanson,W. Tollett,Frank A. Trusdell,E. F. Younger,Michael H. Zoeller,E. K. Montgomery-Brown,Kyle R. Anderson,Michael P. Poland,J. L. Ball,J. Bard,Michelle L. Coombs,Hannah R. Dietterich,Christoph Kern,Weston A. Thelen,Peter F. Cervelli,Tim R. Orr,Bruce F. Houghton,C. A. Gansecki,R. Hazlett,Paul Lundgren,A. K. Diefenbach,A. H. Lerner,Gregory P. Waite,Peter J. Kelly,Laura E. Clor,Cynthia Werner,K. Mulliken,G. Fisher,David E. Damby +55 more
TL;DR: Careful historical observation and monitoring of Kīlauea enabled successful forecasting of hazardous events, and cyclic inflation, deflation, and eventual collapse of the summit was tied to lava eruption from lower East Rift Zone fissures.
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A mantle-driven surge in magma supply to Kīlauea Volcano during 2003–2007
TL;DR: The supply of magma to Kīlauea Volcano, Hawai'i, was thought to have been steady over the past decades as discussed by the authors, but instead, the supply from the mantle doubled in 2003-2007, implying that hotspots can provide varying amounts of lava over just a few years.
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Earthquakes triggered by silent slip events on Kīlauea volcano, Hawaii
TL;DR: Swarms of high-frequency earthquakes that accompany otherwise silent slips on Kīlauea volcano, Hawaii are reported on, which could lead to a method for quantifying the increased hazard during slow-slip events, because triggered events have the potential to grow into destructive earthquakes.
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Rapid deformation of Kilauea Volcano: Global Positioning System measurements between 1990 and 1996
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used campaign Global Positioning System (GPS) measurements from 1990 to 1996 to calculate surface displacement rates on Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii, and found that the south flank of the volcano, which has generated several large earthquakes in the past 3 decades, is displacing at up to ;8 cm/yr to the south-southeast.
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Deep Magma Body Beneath the Summit and Rift Zones of Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii
TL;DR: Kilauea's magmatic system is probably deeper and more extensive than previously thought; the summit and both rift zones may be underlain by a thick, near vertical dike-like magma system at a depth of 3 to 9 kilometers.