English
 
Privacy Policy Disclaimer
  Advanced SearchBrowse

Item

ITEM ACTIONSEXPORT

Released

Journal Article

From magma to macrophage: the grand challenges of volcanic environments

Authors

Mériaux,  Catherine A.
External Organizations;

Gasu,  Edward Ntim
External Organizations;

Nyagatare,  Guillaume
External Organizations;

Ruganzu,  Vicky
External Organizations;

Ntivuguruzwa,  Philbert
External Organizations;

Mutagoma,  Mwumvaneza
External Organizations;

Ayele,  Atalay
External Organizations;

Cartwright,  Julyan H. E.
External Organizations;

Cayol,  Valérie
External Organizations;

Charlet,  Laurent
External Organizations;

Corradino,  Claudia
External Organizations;

Costa,  Antonio
External Organizations;

Darchambeau,  François
External Organizations;

Davis,  Timothy
External Organizations;

Folch,  Arnau
External Organizations;

Gilbert,  Benjamin
External Organizations;

Gourlan,  Alexandra Tiaré
External Organizations;

Hogg,  Andrew J.
External Organizations;

Keir,  Derek
External Organizations;

Massaro,  Silvia
External Organizations;

Mather,  Tamsin A.
External Organizations;

Oppenheimer,  Clive
External Organizations;

Pagli,  Carolina
External Organizations;

Pinel,  Virginie
External Organizations;

/persons/resource/rivalta

Rivalta,  Eleonora       
2.1 Physics of Earthquakes and Volcanoes, 2.0 Geophysics, Departments, GFZ Publication Database, GFZ Helmholtz Centre for Geosciences;

Rust,  Alison
External Organizations;

Sulpizio,  Roberto
External Organizations;

Kazi Tani,  Latifa Sarra
External Organizations;

Woods,  Andrew W.
External Organizations;

Zanchettin,  Davide
External Organizations;

External Resource
No external resources are shared
Fulltext (restricted access)
There are currently no full texts shared for your IP range.
Fulltext (public)

5038809.pdf
(Publisher version), 2MB

Supplementary Material (public)
There is no public supplementary material available
Citation

Mériaux, C. A., Gasu, E. N., Nyagatare, G., Ruganzu, V., Ntivuguruzwa, P., Mutagoma, M., Ayele, A., Cartwright, J. H. E., Cayol, V., Charlet, L., Corradino, C., Costa, A., Darchambeau, F., Davis, T., Folch, A., Gilbert, B., Gourlan, A. T., Hogg, A. J., Keir, D., Massaro, S., Mather, T. A., Oppenheimer, C., Pagli, C., Pinel, V., Rivalta, E., Rust, A., Sulpizio, R., Kazi Tani, L. S., Woods, A. W., Zanchettin, D. (2026): From magma to macrophage: the grand challenges of volcanic environments. - Bulletin of Volcanology, 88, 22.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00445-026-01936-2


Cite as: https://gfzpublic.gfz.de/pubman/item/item_5038809
Abstract
The interdisciplinary study of volcanic processes, which extend across all timescales and lengths, requires a multitude of approaches, ranging from analogue and numerical modelling to observations and fieldwork and extending to mathematics. A conference was held at the East African Institute for Fundamental Research, affiliated with the University of Rwanda, a country which, along with the Democratic Republic of Congo, presents a unique geodynamic context. Located along the East African Rift, an active seismic region, Rwanda is close to two of Africa's most active volcanoes, including Nyiragongo, which overlooks Lake Kivu, a deep volcanic lake rich in dissolved carbon dioxide and methane, the latter of which is used for electricity generation. In this context, the conference addressed many “classic” volcanological topics and their modern advances, such as multiphase lava flows, subsurface magma propagation, seismic and deformation signals from a volcano, modelling of volcanic emission dispersion, and volcanic lakes. Yet, it broadened the discussion to the volcanic particle-water interface and its impact on soils, volcanoes and climate change, and volcanoes and health. This article aims to highlight and share the richness of the integration and interconnectedness of the various questions related to a volcanic environment, as well as their impact on society. Ultimately, this conference also demonstrated the importance of promoting science in Africa and developing countries so that the next generation of African researchers is equipped to address the challenges facing their nations.