Oppenheimer C
University of Cambridge.
Disasters. 1998 Sep;22(3):268-81. doi: 10.1111/1467-7717.00091.
In June 1994 the summit crater of Nyiragongo volcano, located in the Great Lakes region of central Africa, began to fill with new lava, ending nearly 12 years of quiescence. An earlier eruption of the volcano in 1977 had culminated in the catastrophic draining of a lava lake through fissures in the crater wall, feeding highly mobile lava flows which reached the outskirts of Goma and killed more than 70 people. By July 1994, as many as 20,000 Hutu refugees were arriving in Goma every hour, only 18 km south from the summit of Nyiragongo. The exodus brought more than one million people to the camps near the town raising fears of a repeat of the 1977 eruption. This paper examines the role that satellite remote sensing could have played in surveillance of the volcano during this time, and demonstrates the potential for monitoring this and other volcanoes in the future. Images recorded by the spaceborne Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR)--freely available over the Internet--provide semi-quantitative information on the activity of the volcano. The aim of this paper is to promote the wider use of readily available technologies.
1994年6月,位于非洲中部大湖地区的尼拉贡戈火山的火山口开始被新的熔岩填满,结束了近12年的平静期。该火山在1977年的一次早期喷发中,熔岩湖通过火山口壁的裂缝灾难性地排空,形成了流动性很强的熔岩流,一直蔓延到戈马市郊,造成70多人死亡。到1994年7月,每小时有多达20000名胡图族难民抵达戈马,这里距离尼拉贡戈火山山顶仅18公里。这次大规模迁徙使100多万人涌入该镇附近的营地,人们担心1977年的火山喷发会再次发生。本文探讨了在此期间卫星遥感在火山监测中可能发挥的作用,并展示了未来监测这座火山及其他火山的潜力。由星载高级甚高分辨率辐射计(AVHRR)记录的图像——可在互联网上免费获取——提供了有关火山活动的半定量信息。本文旨在推广更广泛地使用现有技术。