Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2122/13629
Authors: Petrosino, Simona* 
Cusano, Paola* 
Title: Low frequency seismic source investigation in volcanic environment: the Mt. Vesuvius atypical case
Journal: Advances in Geosciences 
Series/Report no.: /52 (2020)
Publisher: EGU
Issue Date: Jun-2020
DOI: 10.5194/adgeo-52-29-2020
URL: https://adgeo.copernicus.org/articles/52/29/2020/
Abstract: We present a detailed analysis of the low frequency seismicity occurred at Mt. Vesuvius in the time range 2003–2018. This kind of seismicity is atypical for the volcano and poorly studied, therefore we characterized it in terms of spectral analysis, waveform cross-correlation, location and polarization properties. The different decay patterns of the spectra, the existence of both earthquake families as well as single events, the relatively wide seismogenic volume inferred from the locations and polarization features, indicate that the events are caused by distinct source mechanisms: slow brittle failure in dry rocks and resonance of fluid-filled cracks. On these basis, we classified the earthquakes as Low Frequency (LF) and Long Period (LP). Despite the differences between the two classes, both the event types are ascribable to the dynamics of the deep hydrothermal reservoir which induces variations of the fluid pore pressure in the medium. The fluid amount involved in the generation process, as well as the physical-chemical properties of the surrounding rocks are the essential factors that control the occurrence of a mechanism rather than the other.
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