Data di Pubblicazione:
2016
Abstract:
We report evidences of active seabed doming and gas discharge few kilometers offshore from the
Naples harbor (Italy). Pockmarks, mounds, and craters characterize the seabed. These morphologies
represent the top of shallow crustal structures including pagodas, faults and folds affecting the
present-day seabed. They record upraise, pressurization, and release of He and CO2 from mantle melts
and decarbonation reactions of crustal rocks. These gases are likely similar to those that feed the
hydrothermal systems of the Ischia, Campi Flegrei and Somma-Vesuvius active volcanoes, suggesting
the occurrence of a mantle source variously mixed to crustal fluids beneath the Gulf of Naples. The
seafloor swelling and breaching by gas upraising and pressurization processes require overpressures in
the order of 2-3 MPa. Seabed doming, faulting, and gas discharge are manifestations of non-volcanic
unrests potentially preluding submarine eruptions and/or hydrothermal explosions
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Gulf of Naples
Elenco autori:
Vaselli, Orlando; Tassi, Franco; Giannini, Luciano; Ventura, Guido; Sacchi, Marco; Passaro, Salvatore; Vallefuoco, Mattia; Tamburrino, Stella
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