2022 Pacific volcano eruption made a deep dive into Alaska

Rod Boyce
907-474-7185
Aug. 20, 2025

Hunga Tonga鈥揌unga Ha鈥檃pai volcano eruption
Photo courtesy of Tonga Geological Services via the Smithsonian Institution鈥檚 Global Volcanism Program
Hunga Tonga鈥揌unga Ha鈥檃pai volcano is one of 12 confirmed submarine volcanoes along a segment of the larger Tonga-Kermadec volcanic arc. The Tonga-Kermadec arc formed as a result of subduction of the Pacific Plate beneath the Indo-Australian Plate.

Atmospheric waves from a massive 2022 South Pacific volcanic eruption created seismic waves that penetrated Earth to at least 5 kilometers in Alaska, creating an opportunity to employ an unusual method of peering into the state鈥檚 deep subsurface.

Ken Macpherson, a scientist at the University of Alaska Fairbanks Geophysical Institute, and other researchers analyzed the coupling of atmospheric pressure waves with the ground to determine the speed at which seismic waves travel through Alaska鈥檚 upper crust. 

Subsurface material properties such as hardness, which controls seismic velocity, can be inferred through examination of the relative strength of incoming pressure waves and the resulting seismic waves.

Think of it like blowing onto the surface of a bowl of Jell-O versus blowing on a pan of brownie batter with equal force: You could see the Jell-O shake, but the brownies would not move much because the material is stiffer.

鈥淗unga-Tonga鈥檚 pressure waves have provided us much more information about how seismic waves propagate in Alaska,鈥 Macpherson said.

Macpherson's research of seismic velocity to depths of 30 meters, 2 kilometers and 5 kilometers was published July 8 in .

The eruption

The explosive eruption of Hunga Tonga鈥揌unga Ha鈥檃pai volcano, in the Kingdom of Tonga and about 6,000 miles from Alaska, occurred on Jan. 15, 2022. The eruption鈥檚 atmospheric waves were the largest known from a volcano since the 1883 Krakatau eruption.

鈥淗unga Tonga was an unprecedented explosion in the instrument age,鈥 said Macpherson, who is with the institute鈥檚 Wilson Alaska Technical Center. 鈥淭hose pressure waves shook Alaska, 6,000 miles away, which I just think is so remarkable. And many of those were long-period waves and consequently shook Earth to a great depth.鈥

A network of 150 co-located barometers, infrasound sensors and seismometers in Alaska recorded the eruption鈥檚 data used in Macpherson鈥檚 research.

Gaining information via air-to-ground coupling at a depth of 5 kilometers is uncommon. That鈥檚 because seismic waves produced through coupling usually have a shorter wavelength 鈥 unless the power source is something really, really big.

Series of satellite images of Hunga Tonga eruption
Image by Joshua Stevens/NASA Earth Observatory, using GOES-17 imagery courtesy of National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and National Environmental Satellite, Data and Information Service
A NASA satellite captured the explosive eruption of Hunga Tonga鈥揌unga Ha鈥榓pai in the South Pacific.

鈥淏ecause the Hunga explosion was so enormous, the pressure waves that traveled the long distance to Alaska were still powerful enough to shake the Earth, and were therefore ideal for a coupling study,鈥 Macpherson said.

Waves of information

The velocity research can be an additional tool for seismic hazard analysis because wave speed affects the level of ground motion. 

鈥淚f a propagating wave is in deep material and going fast but suddenly hits a softer material, the conservation of energy says, 鈥榃ell, I鈥檓 going slower, but I still have the same energy,鈥欌 Macpherson said. 鈥淭hat means amplitudes get bigger, causing stronger shaking.鈥

鈥淛ust knowing those upper crustal velocities is good for seismic hazard analysis,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 [also] good for network operators like the Alaska Earthquake Center because they can accurately apply the crustal velocity beneath a particular seismic station to potentially increase earthquake location accuracy.鈥

Macpherson鈥檚 work also can be particularly helpful in tomography, a technique seismologists use to create three-dimensional images of Earth鈥檚 interior by analyzing how seismic waves travel through different materials. Tomography reveals variations in properties such as density or velocity, helping scientists map the deep subsurface.

鈥淭o do tomography properly you have to do what鈥檚 called a crustal correction because velocities in the upper crust are so much different from those deeper velocities that you鈥檙e trying to get at,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f you know something about the crust, you can apply a correction that improves tomography for tens to hundreds of kilometers.鈥

The research paper鈥檚 co-authors include research professor David Fee, postdoctoral researcher Stefan Awender, assistant professor Bryant Chow and seismo-acoustic researchers Juliann Colwell and Sam Delamere, all with the 黑料黑历史 Geophysical Institute鈥檚 Wilson Alaska Technical Center. Matthew Haney of the U.S. Geological Survey is also a co-author.

The Nuclear Arms Control Technology Program at the U.S. Defense Threat Reduction Agency financially supported the research.

ADDITIONAL CONTACT: Ken Macpherson, kamacpherson@alaska.edu

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