Volcanic eruptions and the global subsea telecommunications network.

IF 3.6 2区 地球科学 Q1 GEOSCIENCES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Bulletin of Volcanology Pub Date : 2025-01-01 Epub Date: 2025-06-04 DOI:10.1007/s00445-025-01832-1
Michael A Clare, Isobel A Yeo, Jacob Nash, James E Hunt, Semisi Panuve, Alasdair Wilkie, Rebecca Williams, Natasha Dowey, Peter Rowley, Jennifer Barclay, Jeremy Phillips, Jazmin Scarlett, Samantha Engwell, Timothy J Henstock, Sarah Seabrook, Sally Watson, Richard Wysoczanski, Marta Ribo, Shane Cronin, Peter J Talling, Michael Cassidy, Sebastian Watt, Richard Robertson
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

When the first transoceanic telegraph cables were laid in the mid-1800s, rapid communication between continents became possible. The advent of fibre-optic submarine cables in the 1990s catalyzed a global digital revolution. Today, a network of > 1.7 million kilometres of fibre-optic cables crosses the oceans, carrying more than 99% of all digital data traffic worldwide and trillions of dollars in financial transactions. These arteries of the global internet underpin many aspects of our daily lives, and are particularly important for remote island communities that rely on submarine cables for telemedicine, e-commerce, and online education. However, these same remote communities are often in seismically and volcanically active regions and can be prone to natural hazards that threaten their critical subsea communication infrastructure. This vulnerability was acutely exposed in January 2022, when the collapse of the eruption plume of Hunga Volcano triggered fast-moving density currents that damaged Tonga's only international submarine cable, cutting off an entire nation from global communications in the midst of a volcanic crisis. Here, we present a new comprehensive analysis of damage to subsea communications cables by volcanic events from around the world, and document their diverse impacts. Examples include (i) severing of the telegraph cable crossing the Sunda Strait by a tsunami triggered by the 1883 Krakatau eruption, Indonesia; (ii) ocean-entering pyroclastic density currents, lahars, and landslides during the 1902 eruptions of Mount Pelée, Martinique, that damaged six telegraph cables; (iii) destruction of a cable landing station on Montserrat by a pyroclastic density current in 1997; (iv) submarine slope failure at Kick 'em Jenny, Grenada, that damaged two fibre-optic cables; (v) complete loss of the telecommunications network due to power outages following the 2000 eruption of Miyake-jima, Japan; and (vi) disruption to subsea cables resulting from the 2021 eruption of La Soufrière, St. Vincent. We find that the causes of damage typically relate to secondary hazards that occur not only at the same time as the eruption climax, but also some time after. There does not appear to be an explosivity intensity threshold for cable-damaging events; however, the extent of damage may be related to the original volcano morphology (e.g. steep slopes), spatial location (e.g. near the coast or partially/totally submerged), the eruption size or explosivity, and/or volcanic depositional processes involved. Based on these diverse case studies, we present lessons learned for enhancing telecommunications resilience, and discuss how subsea cables themselves can be used as sensors to improve understanding and early warning of volcanic hazards, potentially filling a monitoring gap for remote island communities.

Supplementary information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s00445-025-01832-1.

火山爆发和全球海底电信网络。
当第一条跨洋电报电缆在19世纪中期铺设时,大陆之间的快速通信成为可能。上世纪90年代海底光缆的出现催生了一场全球数字革命。今天,一个拥有170万公里光纤电缆的网络跨越海洋,承载着全球99%以上的数字数据流量和数万亿美元的金融交易。这些全球互联网的动脉支撑着我们日常生活的许多方面,对于依赖海底电缆进行远程医疗、电子商务和在线教育的偏远岛屿社区尤为重要。然而,这些偏远社区往往位于地震和火山活跃地区,容易受到自然灾害的影响,威胁到其关键的海底通信基础设施。这一脆弱性在2022年1月暴露无遗,当时亨加火山喷发的羽流崩塌引发了快速移动的密度流,破坏了汤加唯一的国际海底电缆,在火山危机中切断了整个国家与全球通信的联系。在这里,我们对世界各地火山事件对海底通信电缆的破坏进行了新的综合分析,并记录了它们的不同影响。例子包括(i) 1883年印度尼西亚喀拉喀托火山爆发引发的海啸切断了穿越巽他海峡的电报电缆;(二)1902年马提尼克岛佩尔萨梅火山喷发期间,进入海洋的火山碎屑密度流、火山泥流和山体滑坡损坏了六条电报电缆;1997年火山碎屑密度流摧毁蒙特塞拉特的一个电缆登陆站;(iv)格林纳达Kick 'em Jenny海底斜坡破坏,损坏了两条光纤电缆;(v) 2000年日本三宅岛火山爆发后,由于电力中断,电信网络完全丧失;(vi) 2021年圣文森特La soufri火山喷发造成的海底电缆中断。我们发现,破坏的原因通常与次级灾害有关,这些灾害不仅发生在喷发高潮的同时,而且还发生在喷发高潮之后的一段时间。电缆损坏事件似乎没有爆炸强度阈值;然而,破坏的程度可能与原始火山形态(如陡峭的斜坡)、空间位置(如靠近海岸或部分/完全淹没)、喷发规模或爆发力以及所涉及的火山沉积过程有关。基于这些不同的案例研究,我们提出了提高电信弹性的经验教训,并讨论了如何将海底电缆本身用作传感器,以提高对火山灾害的了解和早期预警,从而可能填补偏远岛屿社区的监测空白。补充信息:在线版本包含补充资料,可在10.1007/s00445-025-01832-1获得。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Bulletin of Volcanology
Bulletin of Volcanology 地学-地球科学综合
CiteScore
6.40
自引率
20.00%
发文量
89
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Bulletin of Volcanology was founded in 1922, as Bulletin Volcanologique, and is the official journal of the International Association of Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth’s Interior (IAVCEI). The Bulletin of Volcanology publishes papers on volcanoes, their products, their eruptive behavior, and their hazards. Papers aimed at understanding the deeper structure of volcanoes, and the evolution of magmatic systems using geochemical, petrological, and geophysical techniques are also published. Material is published in four sections: Review Articles; Research Articles; Short Scientific Communications; and a Forum that provides for discussion of controversial issues and for comment and reply on previously published Articles and Communications.
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