Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2122/16734
Authors: D'Incecco, P* 
Filiberto, Justin* 
Garvin, J B* 
Arney, G N* 
Getty, S A* 
Ghail, R* 
Zelenyi, Lev M* 
Zasova, L V* 
Ivanov, M A* 
Gorinov, D A* 
Bhattacharya, S* 
Bhiravarasu, S S* 
Putrevu, D* 
Monaco, Carmelo* 
Branca, Stefano* 
Aveni, S* 
López, I* 
Eggers, G L* 
Mari, N* 
Blackett, M* 
Komatsu, Goro* 
Kosenkova, A* 
Cardinale, M* 
El Yazidi, M* 
Di Achille, G* 
Title: Mount Etna as a terrestrial laboratory to investigate recent volcanic activity on Venus by future missions: A comparison with Idunn Mons, Venus
Journal: Icarus 
Series/Report no.: /411 (2024)
Publisher: Elsevier
Issue Date: 2024
DOI: 10.1016/j.icarus.2024.115959
Abstract: The recently selected missions to Venus have opened a new era for the exploration of this planet. These missions will provide information about the chemistry of the atmosphere, the geomorphology, local-to-regional surface composition, and the rheology of the interior. One key scientific question to be addressed by these future missions is whether Venus remains volcanically active, and if so, how its volcanism is currently evolving. Hence, it is fundamental to analyze appropriate terrestrial analog sites for the study of possibly active volcanism on Venus. To this regard, we propose Mount Etna - one of the most active and monitored volcanoes on Earth - as a suitable terrestrial laboratory for remote and in-situ investigations to be performed by future missions to Venus. Being characterized by both effusive and explosive volcanic products, Mount Etna offers the opportunity to analyze multiple eruptive styles, both monitoring active volcanism and identifying the possible occurrence of pyroclastic activity on Venus. We directly compare Mount Etna with Idunn Mons, one of the most promising potentially active volcanoes of Venus. Despite the two structures show a different topography, they also show some interesting points of comparison, and in particular: a) comparable morpho-structural setting, since both volcanoes interact with a rift zone, and b) morphologically similar volcanic fields around both Mount Etna and Idunn Mons. Given its ease of access, we also propose Mount Etna as an analog site for laboratory spectroscopic studies to identify the signatures of unaltered volcanic deposits on Venus.
Appears in Collections:Article published / in press

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat
Icarus_2024.pdfOpen Access Published file7.06 MBAdobe PDFView/Open
Show full item record

Page view(s)

157
checked on Apr 27, 2024

Download(s)

2
checked on Apr 27, 2024

Google ScholarTM

Check

Altmetric