Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2122/13954
Authors: Pelullo, Carlo* 
Cirillo, Gianluca* 
Iovine, Raffaella Silvia* 
Arienzo, Ilenia* 
Aulinas, Meritxell* 
Pappalardo, Lucia* 
Petrosino, Paola* 
Fernández-Turiel, J L* 
D'Antonio, Massimo* 
Title: Geochemical and Sr–Nd isotopic features of the Zaro volcanic complex: insights on the magmatic processes triggering a small-scale prehistoric eruption at Ischia island (south Italy)
Journal: International Journal of Earth Sciences 
Series/Report no.: /109 (2020)
Publisher: Springer
Issue Date: 2020
DOI: 10.1007/s00531-020-01933-6
Keywords: Ischia island
Zaro volcanic complex
Mineral chemistry
Isotope geochemistry
Mafic enclaves
Abstract: The prehistoric (<7 ka) Zaro eruption at Ischia island (Southern Italy) produced a lava complex overlaying a pyroclastic deposit. Although being of low energy, the Zaro eruption might have caused casualties among the neolithic population that inhabited that area of Ischia, and damages to their settlements. A similar eruption at Ischia with its present-day population would turn into a disaster. Therefore, understanding the magmatic processes that triggered the Zaro eruption would be important for volcanic hazard assessment and risk mitigation, so as to improve a knowledge that can be applied to other active volcanic areas worldwide. The main Zaro lava body is trachyte and hosts abundant mafc and felsic enclaves. Here all juvenile facies have been fully characterized from petrographic, geochemical and isotopic viewpoints. The whole dataset (major and trace element contents; Sr–Nd isotopic composition) leads to rule out a genetic link by fractional crystallization among the variable facies. Thus, we suggest that the Zaro mafc enclaves could represent a deep-origin mafc magma that mingled/mixed with the main trachytic one residing in the Ischia shallow magmatic system. The intrusion of such a mafc magma into a shallow reservoir flled by partly crystallized, evolved magma could have destabilized the magmatic system presumably acting as a rapid eruption trigger. The resulting processes of convection, mixing and rejuvenation have possibly played an important role in pre- and syn-eruptive phases also in several eruptions of diferent sizes in the Neapolitan area and elsewhere in the world.
Appears in Collections:Article published / in press

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat
Pelullo2020_Article_GeochemicalAndSrNdIsotopicFeat.pdf3.96 MBAdobe PDFView/Open
Show full item record

Page view(s)

870
checked on Apr 24, 2024

Download(s)

15
checked on Apr 24, 2024

Google ScholarTM

Check

Altmetric