Long-period seismic events with strikingly regular temporal patterns on Katla volcano's south flank (Iceland)
Giulia Sgattoni, Zeinab Jeddi, \'Olafur Gu{\dh}mundsson, P\'all, Einarsson, Ari Tryggvason, Bj\"orn Lund, Federico Lucchi

TL;DR
This study documents a unique, long-lasting cluster of regular, long-period seismic events on Katla's south flank, likely caused by a shallow hydrothermal system activated by magmatic or structural changes, with implications for volcano monitoring.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed analysis of a stable, regular seismic cluster on Katla, distinguishing volcanic sources from glacial origins, and suggests a hydrothermal activation mechanism.
Findings
Seismic events started during a glacier outburst in 2011.
Events show remarkable stability over 3.5 years with regular intervals.
Seismic activity is more consistent with volcanic processes than glacial ones.
Abstract
Katla is a threatening volcano in Iceland, partly covered by the M\'yrdalsj\"okull ice cap. The volcano has a large caldera with several active geothermal areas. A peculiar cluster of long-period seismic events started on Katla's south flank in July 2011, during an unrest episode in the caldera that culminated in a glacier outburst. The seismic events were tightly clustered at shallow depth in the Gvendarfell area, 4 km south of the caldera, under a small glacier stream on the southern margin of M\'yrdalsj\"okull. No seismic events were known to have occurred in this area before. The most striking feature of this seismic cluster is its temporal pattern, characterized by regular intervals between repeating seismic events, modulated by a seasonal variation. Remarkable is also the stability of both the time and waveform features over a long time period, around 3.5 years. No comparable…
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