The Laboratoire de physique du globe was created in March 1950 at Parnasse, a site located at the base of La Soufrière volcano. First two seismographs were installed in 1952. A seismic vault was dug and equipped with two electromagnetic seismographs in 1956 when a phreatic eruption took place.
In 1964, the observatory implemented a cabled seismic network that detected La Soufrière seismic crisis prior the eruption of 1976. When the Saint-Claude / Basse-Terre region was evacuated in July-August 1976, the observatory moved to the Grande poudrière at Fort St-Charles in Basse-Terre. The monitoring facilities remained there for 17 years, while the geochemistry laboratory returned to Parnasse once the crisis of 1976 was over.
Following the recommendations of the international evaluation committee during the 1976 Soufrière of Guadeloupe crisis, the observatory of Guadeloupe initiated in the 1980s the development of a multi-parameters approach to monitor volcanoes. Thus the volcanological and seismological observatory of Guadeloupe has dedicated itself to acquiring geological, geophysical and geochemical data and to operate state-of-the-art monitoring networks in collaboration with national and international research teams and the World Organization of Volcano Observatories (WOVO) of the International Association of Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth’s Interior (IAVCEI).
In 1993, the observatory moved in a modern building at the top of Houëlmont, located 9 km southwest of Soufrière. In 2001, due to its involvement in the field of seismology and research related to seismic risk, the IPGP renamed the observatory with its current name: Observatoire volcanologique et sismologique de Guadeloupe.
In the 2010's the volcanological and seismological observatories of Guadeloupe and Martinique have modernized the Lesser Antilles Arc seismic, deformation and tide monitoring network to set up an arc scale observatory in collaboration with the Seismic Research Centre of the University of the West Indies (Trinidad). The output of this regional network are threefold: 1) participate to the tsunami warning in the Caribbean by distributing relevant data to the Caribbean Tsunami Warning System (ICG-CARIBE-EWS), 2) improve the volcanic and seismic monitoring to advice local authorities and 3) stimulate scientific research in the lesser Antilles by disseminating high quality data.
The three missions of the volcanological and seismological observatory of Guade...
In 1964, the observatory implemented a cabled seismic network that detected La Soufrière seismic crisis prior the eruption of 1976. When the Saint-Claude / Basse-Terre region was evacuated in July-August 1976, the observatory moved to the Grande poudrière at Fort St-Charles in Basse-Terre. The monitoring facilities remained there for 17 years, while the geochemistry laboratory returned to Parnasse once the crisis of 1976 was over.
Following the recommendations of the international evaluation committee during the 1976 Soufrière of Guadeloupe crisis, the observatory of Guadeloupe initiated in the 1980s the development of a multi-parameters approach to monitor volcanoes. Thus the volcanological and seismological observatory of Guadeloupe has dedicated itself to acquiring geological, geophysical and geochemical data and to operate state-of-the-art monitoring networks in collaboration with national and international research teams and the World Organization of Volcano Observatories (WOVO) of the International Association of Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth’s Interior (IAVCEI).
In 1993, the observatory moved in a modern building at the top of Houëlmont, located 9 km southwest of Soufrière. In 2001, due to its involvement in the field of seismology and research related to seismic risk, the IPGP renamed the observatory with its current name: Observatoire volcanologique et sismologique de Guadeloupe.
In the 2010's the volcanological and seismological observatories of Guadeloupe and Martinique have modernized the Lesser Antilles Arc seismic, deformation and tide monitoring network to set up an arc scale observatory in collaboration with the Seismic Research Centre of the University of the West Indies (Trinidad). The output of this regional network are threefold: 1) participate to the tsunami warning in the Caribbean by distributing relevant data to the Caribbean Tsunami Warning System (ICG-CARIBE-EWS), 2) improve the volcanic and seismic monitoring to advice local authorities and 3) stimulate scientific research in the lesser Antilles by disseminating high quality data.
The three missions of the volcanological and seismological observatory of Guade...