Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2122/15852
Authors: Ricco, Ciro* 
Aquino, Ida* 
Borgstrom, Sven* 
Del Gaudio, Carlo* 
Title: 19 years of tilt data on Mt. Vesuvius: state of the art and future perspectives
Journal: Annals of Geophysics 
Series/Report no.: 4/56 (2013)
Publisher: INGV
Issue Date: 8-Jul-2013
DOI: 10.4401/ag-6459
Keywords: Monitoring, Tilt network, Ground deformation, Vesuvius
Subject Classification04.08. Volcanology 
Abstract: Mt. Vesuvius, located along the SW border of the Campania Plane graben, is one of the most studied volcanoes worldwide, from both the volcanological and the geophysical, geochemical and geodetic point of view. In order to better understand its dynamics, the deformation of the volcano has been already studied since the early ’70s by setting up level- ling lines and, since a few years later, through trilateration networks, whereas ground tilt monitoring started in 1993. Tilt variations were recorded by an automatic surface station set up at the Osservatorio Vesu- viano (O.V.) bunker (OVO) and data recorded were transmitted to the O.V. Surveillance Centre in Naples. Afterwards, in 1996 two more iden- tical stations were set up close to Torre del Greco (CMD), and close to Tre- case (TRC). In 2002 the data acquisition system was replaced, while at the end of 2011 a Lily borehole sensor was set up at 26 m depth, replacing the old TRC tilt station. The paper describes in details the tilt network of Mt. Vesuvius, its development over time and the data processing procedure; moreover, the ground deformation pattern is discussed, as inferred from the study of 19 years of data and its change during the seismic crises of 1995-1996 and 1999-2000. From the information obtained from the tilt- metric monitoring, a complex deformation pattern can be deduced, strongly dependent on the position of the sites in which the sensors were set up with respect to the morphology of the volcanic edifice and its struc- tural outlines. If we consider the signals as they were recorded, although previously corrected for the influences of the thermo-elastic strain on the sensors, the tilting occurs mainly in the SW direction with rates of about 11 μradians/year on both the western and eastern flanks and of about 13 μradians/year on the southern one. Because tilt vectors point in the long term outward from the summit and towards the subsiding area, this sup- ports the hypothesis of a southern areas subsidence, according with a spreading effect of Vesuvius, taking into account geological, structural, geophysical and geodetical (optical levelling, InSAR) data. The SW tilt- ing occurs therefore irregularly and shows some seasonalities, consistent with the solar thermal radiation whose removal by statistical procedure outlines a different but equally interesting deformation field as it shows in- terruptions with changes in both trend and amplitude during two periods of strong seismic activity that affected Mt. Vesuvius in the periods 1995- 1996 and late 1999-2000, marked by an average rate of energy release of at least one order of magnitude greater than the previous and following periods. Another change in intensity and direction of the deformation de- tected by tiltmeters since 2000, connected with the variations of the phase shift between the tilt components and the temperature recorded, compared to previous years, occurs during a strong decrease of the energy released by Vesuvius earthquakes.
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