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  • PublicationOpen Access
    3D seismic velocity models from local earthquake tomography furnish new insights on the Mount Etna volcano (Southern Italy)
    We present a new seismotomography investigation providing a 3-D overall model of Vp, Vs and Vp/ Vs for Mt. Etna, the largest and most active volcano in Europe. We estimated and jointly evaluated P-and S-wave velocity patterns together with the Vp/Vs ratio, particularly useful to discriminate the presence of groundwater, gas, and melts and thus very precious for volcano investigations. We applied the LOTOS software to ~ 4600 crustal earthquakes that occurred in the Etnean area during the last 26 years, the longest time-interval ever analysed for Mt. Etna. This wide dataset has allowed us to characterize the volcano velocity structure getting over possible singularities due to specific eruptive phases. Our results further refined the high velocity body widely recognized in the southeastern sector of Mt. Etna by furnishing new clues on the possible former magma pathways. Moreover, the obtained 3D seismic velocity model depicted new anomalies revealing the presence of: (i) two shallow underground aquifers in the northern Etnean sector; (ii) a volume of strongly fractured rocks filled of fluids along the eastern flank; (iii) a quite deep region of probable fluid accumulation apparently not linked to the volcanic activity in the western sector. Seismic tomography based on arrival times of the P-and S-waves from local earthquakes is a powerful tool actively used for studying volcanic systems. For several volcanoes around the world, tomography allowed to successfully reconstruct the shallow-depth volcanic structure (see e.g., Refs. 1-4). Tomographic analyses have furnished, in particular, accurate pictures of the feeding systems and very precious constraints for modelling the volcanic processes also highlighting that each volcano has some peculiar features that makes it unique. In the last decades, tomographic studies have strongly benefited from the strengthening of seismic networks and computational progresses that, particularly for volcanic regions, allowed to carefully reconstruct 3D velocity models by furnishing P-and S-wave velocities and the Vp/Vs ratio, a key parameter to discriminate the presence of groundwater, gas, and melts (Refs. 5-7 , among others). On these grounds, in the present study we collected data from more than 4600 earthquakes recorded between 1997 and 2022 in order to perform a new tomographic inversion of Mt. Etna (South Italy) by applying the software LOTOS 8. Mt. Etna is the largest and most active volcano in Europe 9. It is a composite strato-volcano rising 3300 m above the sea level in eastern Sicily (Fig. 1). Mt. Etna is located at the intersection between several major structural units, where the Apennine-Maghrebian thrust belt, the Hyblean Plateau of the Africa foreland and extensional structures on the western side of the Ionian basin coexist (Fig. 1). Its activity primarily consists of nearly continuous degassing from summit craters, strombolian phases of highly variable intensity, and frequent basaltic lava flows, representing a main source of volcanic hazard in the area. Moreover, flank eruptions during which the magma bypasses the central plumbing system, intrudes as dikes and erupts along the volcano flanks, periodically occur. This kind of event produces a massive deformation affecting the entire morphology of the edifice (e.g., Refs. 10-12). In particular, in the last decade it has experienced a significant increase in eruption frequency together with the development of some of the most energetic paroxysmal sequences recorded at Mt. Etna in recent times 13. These include the three-year-long sequence of lava fountaining occurred between 2011 and 2013 14 and the very recent sequence of eruptions that took place between December 2020 and February 2022 15. Moreover, also during the writing of this paper, some episodes of explosions with ash emissions were recorded.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Tettonica attiva nell'area del bacino di Sulmona
    (2005-05-27) ;
    Gori, S.; Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, Sezione Milano-Pavia, Milano, Italia
    ;
    Active normal faults and fault systems potentially responsible for earthquakes with Magnitude up to 7 have been detected in the central Apennines since the 90s of the last century. Strong historical earthquakes have been associated to some active faults by means of paleoseismological analysis or by the comparison between the damage distribution and the fault geometry. On the other hand, several faults showing evidence of Late Quaternary activity cannot be related to high-magnitude historical earthquakes and are therefore defined as silent. The level of hazard associated to these silent faults is commonly considered as high. Within this light, the fault affecting the south-western slope of Mt. Morrone, in the Abruzzi Apennines, can certainly be considered as silent. Indeed, this tectonic structure, made of two parallel, northwest-southeast trending fault segments, is considered as potentially responsible for M ≥ 6.5 earthquakes, but its last activation probably occurred about 1,800 years ago, in the 2nd century AD. Geological and geomorphological surveys have been performed along the Mt. Morrone south-western slope in order to achieve data useful for the definition of (i) the kinematics and (ii) the slip rate of the mentioned fault system. Our analyses allowed us to confirm that this tectonic structure is characterized by a mainly normal kinematics with a minor left-lateral oblique component, fitting an about N 20° trending extensional deformation. The slip rate of the westernmost fault segment has been estimated through the offset of three orders of alluvial fan deposits attributed to the late Pleistocene by means of radiocarbon dating and tephrochronological age determinations. The slip rate estimate ranges between 0.27 and 0.36 mm/yr. The lack of displaced deposits in the footwall of the fault has hindered the estimation of the slip rate related to the eastern fault segment. The geometry of the two fault segments allowed us to hypothesize that they probably represents the splaying at surface of the same deep-seated fault. Therefore, assuming an ditribution of the slip between the two fault segments, a total slip rate for the Mt. Morrone fault system ranging between 0.54 and 0.72 mm/yr may be defined. Moreover, our observations allowed us to confirm that the maximum expected magnitude of an earthquake which may originate along this ~21,5 km-long fault system, according to Wells and Coppersmith (1994), is ~ 6.6.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Large Isotopic Shift in Volcanic Plume CO2 Prior to a Basaltic Paroxysmal Explosion
    Carbon dioxide is a key gas to monitor at volcanoes because its concentration and isotopic signature can indicate changes to magma supply and degassing behavior prior to eruptions, yet carbon isotopic fluctuations at volcanic summits are not well constrained. Here we present δ 13 C results measured from plume samples collected at Stromboli volcano, Italy, by Uncrewed Aerial Systems (UAS). We found contrasting volcanic δ 13 C signatures in 2018 during quiescence (0.36 ± 0.59‰) versus 10 days before the 3 July 2019 paroxysm (5.01 ± 0.56‰). Prior to the eruption, an influx of CO 2-rich magma began degassing at deep levels (∼100 MPa) in an open-system fashion, causing strong isotopic fractionation and maintaining high CO 2 /S t ratios in the gas. This influx occurred between 10 days and several months prior to the event, meaning that isotopic changes in the gas could be detected weeks to months before unrest. Plain Language Summary Volcanoes produce gases which change composition depending on how active the volcano is. One of these gases, carbon dioxide, is known to change in proportion to other gases before an eruption occurs, but little is known about how the isotopes of carbon change leading up to an eruption. Using drones to reach the gaseous plume of Stromboli volcano, Italy, we have captured carbon dioxide both during an inactive phase in 2018 and during the lead-up to a highly explosive eruption called a paroxysm in 2019. There is a stark difference in the carbon isotopes measured 10 days before the 3 July 2019 paroxysm as opposed to those measured in 2018. This is caused by the arrival of CO 2-rich magma which progressively degassed, leading to lighter carbon isotopes in the residual magma over time. This process could have started anywhere from 10 days to several months before the paroxysm. This provides a warning signal which can be detected weeks to months before an active period begins.
  • PublicationRestricted
    Paleo-redox conditions during the demise of a carbonate platform in the Tethyan ocean: Evidence from phosphatized and metals (Mn and Fe) rich hardgrounds
    Phosphatized Mn and Fe rich hardgrounds and condensed pelagic deposits in carbonate platform successions are precious archives of abrupt climate and environmental changes (redox conditions and phosphorous availability) in the past shallow-water marine environment. While numerous examples have been documented in the Cretaceous successions of the Northern Tethys, the scarcity of similar descriptions from the southern margins suggests differences in sedimentary processes or preservation conditions. In this work we study three phosphatized Mn and Fe rich hardgrounds and pelagic condensed deposits that mark the repetitive demise of the Panormide carbonate platform developed in the Southern Tethyan margin during the Cretaceous. The integration of SEM-EDS, PXRD, and Micro-Raman spectroscopy data shows that these hardgrounds consist of fine-grained Fe (goethite and hematite) and Mn (birnessite and/or vernadite) oxides dispersed in a calcite and apatite matrix. Micro-Raman spectroscopy shows the presence of oxidized Mn species: Mn 3+ and Mn 4+. The oxidation of Mn 2+ → Mn 3+/4+ and/or Fe 2+ → Fe 3+ occurred at the sediment-seawater interface under oxic conditions (where both Mn and Fe oxidize) or suboxic conditions (where only Fe oxidizes). The paleoenvironmental perturbations that triggered the formation of both hardgrounds and condensed pelagic deposits were likely related to pCO 2 cycle, upwelling of P-Mn-Fe-rich water masses, eutrophication and phosphatization related to the Cretaceous climate oscillations during the main Oceanic Anoxic Events. These perturbations were likely enhanced by tectonic activity. Moreover, we show that the formation of the phosphatized metals-rich hardgrounds and the recovery of shallow-water sedimentation occurred after long-term periods (6-12 Ma). Thus, the Panormide serves as a remarkable example of resilience amidst significant climatic changes.