Volcanic gases can be harmful to
health, vegetation and infrastructure
By Volcano Hazards USGS
Carbon dioxide gas can collect in
low-lying volcanic areas, posing a lethal risk to humans and animals. A burning
torch lowered into a CO2 pocket (top) causes the flame to go out (bottom).
Magma contains
dissolved gases, which provide the driving force that causes most volcanic
eruptions. As magma rises towards the surface and pressure decreases,
gases are released from the liquid portion of the magma (melt) and continue to
travel upward and are eventually released into the atmosphere. Large eruptions
can release enormous amounts of gas in a short time. The 1991 eruption of Mt. Pinatubo is
thought to have injected more than 250 megatons of gas into the upper
atmosphere on a single day. However, even if magma never reaches the
surface, gases can often escape continuously into the atmosphere from the soil,
volcanic vents, fumaroles, and hydrothermal systems.
By far the most abundant volcanic
gas is water vapor, which is harmless. However, significant amounts of carbon
dioxide, sulfur dioxide, hydrogen sulfide and hydrogen halides can also be
emitted from volcanoes. Depending on their concentrations, these gases are all
potentially hazardous to people, animals, agriculture, and property.
Carbon
dioxide (CO2) trapped in low-lying areas can be lethal to people and
animals
Carbon dioxide constitutes
approximately 0.04% of the air in the Earth's atmosphere. In an average year,
volcanoes release between about 180 and 440 million tonnes of carbon dioxide.
When this colorless, odorless gas is emitted from volcanoes, it typically
becomes diluted to low concentrations very quickly and is not life threatening.
However, because cold carbon dioxide gas is heavier than air it can flow into
in low-lying areas where it can reach much higher concentrations in certain,
very stable atmospheric conditions. This can pose serious risks to people and
animals. Breathing air with more than 3% CO2 can quickly lead
to headaches, dizziness, increased heart rate and difficulty breathing. At
mixing ratios exceeding about 15%, carbon dioxide quickly causes
unconsciousness and death.
Volcanic Smog (vog) is produced from
SO2 gas and is a hazard in Hawaii. Scientists monitor SO2 emission
rates at Kīlauea volcano.
In volcanic or other areas where CO2emissions
occur, it is important to avoid small depressions and low areas that might be
CO2 traps. The boundary between healthy air and lethal gas can
be extremely sharp; even a single step upslope may be adequate to escape death.
In 2006, three
ski patrol members were killed at Mammoth Mountain ski resort after
falling into a snow depression surrounding a volcanic fumarole and
filled with cool CO2 gas. High concentrations of CO2 gas
in soils can also damage or destroy vegetation, as is visible in several areas
on Mammoth
Mountain.
In addition to their direct hazard,
volcanic CO2 emissions
also have the capacity to affect the global climate, but scientific studies
indicate that the average global volcanic output is insignificant when compared
to emissions from human activity.
Sulfur
dioxide (SO2) is irritating to eyes, skin and respiratory system
Sulfur dioxide is a colorless gas
with a pungent odor that irritates skin and the tissues and mucous membranes of
the eyes, nose, and throat. SO2 emissions can cause acid rain
and air pollution downwind of a volcano—at Kīlauea volcano in Hawaii, high
concentrations of sulfur dioxide produce volcanic smog (VOG) causing
persistent health problems for downwind populations. During very large
eruptions, SO2 can be injected to altitudes of greater than
10km into the stratosphere. Here, SO2is converted to sulfate
aerosols which reflect sunlight and therefore have a cooling effect on the
Earth's climate. They also have a role in ozone depletion, as many of the
reactions that destroy ozone occur on the surface of such aerosols.
Please see our discussion of volcanic gases and
climate change for additional information.
Hydrogen
sulfide (H2S) is very toxic in high concentrations
Gas Plume during the 1984 eruption
of Mauna Loa, Hawaii blocks out the sun.
Hydrogen sulfide is a colorless,
flammable gas with a strong, offensive odor. It is sometimes referred to as
sewer gas. Interestingly, the human nose is more sensitive to H2S
than any gas monitoring instrument we have today: air mixtures with as little
as 0.000001% H2S are associated with a rotten egg smell.
Unfortunately, however, our sense of smell is not a reliable alarm - at mixing
ratios above about 0.01%, H2S becomes odorless and very toxic,
causing irritation of the upper respiratory tract and, during long exposure,
pulmonary edema. Exposure to 500 ppm can cause a human to fall unconscious in 5
minutes and die in an hour or less.
Hydrogen
halides (HF, HCl, HBr) are toxic acids
When magma ascends close
to the surface, volcanoes can emit the halogens fluorine, chlorine and bromine
in the form of hydrogen halides (HF, HCl and HBr). These species have high solubility;
therefore they rapidly dissolve in water droplets within volcanic plumes or the
atmosphere where they can potentially cause acid rain. In an ash-producing
eruption, ash particles are also often coated with hydrogen halides. Once
deposited, these coated ash particles can poison drinking water supplies,
agricultural crops, and grazing land.