Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2122/15312
Authors: Tioukov, Valeri* 
Giudicepietro, Flora* 
Macedonio, Giovanni* 
Calvari, Sonia* 
Di Traglia, Federico* 
Fornaciai, Alessandro* 
Favalli, Massimiliano* 
Editors: Olah, Laszlo 
Tanaka, Hiroyuki K M 
Varga, Dezsõ 
Title: Structure of the Shallow Supply System at Stromboli Volcano, Italy, through Integration of Muography, Digital Elevation Models, Seismicity, and Ground Deformation Data
Publisher: American Geophysical Union
Issue Date: Feb-2022
ISBN: 9781119723028
Keywords: Stromboli volcano
Shallow supply system
Subject ClassificationMuography of active volcanoes
Abstract: Muography represents a recent and innovative tool for investigating the interior of active volcanoes. However, when dealing with frequently erupting open-vent volcanoes such as Stromboli, any result should take into con- sideration the structural and morphology changes caused by the eruptive activity. This may cause either summit collapses by magma withdrawal, or morphology growth by the accumulations of a fallout from the explosive activity, or more often a combination of both. In this chapter, we present an integration of various techniques, comprising muography and digital elevation model reconstruction, together with GBInSAR ground deformation and volcano seismicity, to reconstruct the geometry of the shallow magma supply system of the volcano and its changes in time. We show how muography can display the interior of the volcano as well as its outer growth, being sensitive to all volume changes that occurred between the framed surface and the detector. This was discovered in Stromboli by comparing digital topography in the interval between 2010 and 2012, when the rapid growth of the volcano summit by the accumulation of ballistic products in the area between the crater zone and the muon detec- tor occurred. This deposit, together with the filling in of the graben-like depression, formed during the 2007 eruption, by fallout during the persistent explosive activity, contributed to generating a remarkable anomaly in the summit area of the volcano visualized by muography. In addition, the shallow feeding system of the volcano was surveyed by GBInSAR and seismicity, which allowed us to reconstruct its path up to a depth of a few hundred meters.
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