Het zit in dezelfde categorie ja, net als Yellowstone.quote:Op dinsdag 4 januari 2011 10:23 schreef HyperViper het volgende:
Spannend, is deze vergelijkbaar met Toba?
ik ookquote:Op maandag 3 januari 2011 23:20 schreef Honingbijtje het volgende:
Ik hoop stiekem dat ie uitbarst : O
Schijnt ooit een keer uitgebarsten te zijn, maar die was niet zwaarder dan de uitbarsting van Tambora in 1815. (zie ook Volcanic Explosivity Index)quote:Op dinsdag 4 januari 2011 10:23 schreef HyperViper het volgende:
Spannend, is deze vergelijkbaar met Toba?
Gaat dat over de Italiaanse vulkaan?quote:Op woensdag 21 september 2011 16:43 schreef lipjes het volgende:
Ik ga deze eens even kicken
Viel me op dat er de afgelopen tijd wat krachtige activiteit is:
Date Time Magnitude Depth
2011-09-19 23:27:19 2.3 27 Km
2011-09-17 13:41:44 3.6 23 Km
2011-09-08 22:06:21 4.8 33 Km
2011-09-07 00:10:01 5.0 40 Km
2011-09-06 10:47:28 5.0 25 Km
2011-08-16 19:35:20 5.4 40 Km
2011-08-14 20:42:05 4.9 50 Km
2011-08-09 19:24:33 2.8 8 Km
2011-08-07 20:31:52 3.2 8 Km
2011-08-05 10:53:22 4.9 56 Km
Heb je misschien een lnik waar ik meer over de status van de tambora kan vinden? Ik zou het graag willen volgen!quote:Op woensdag 21 september 2011 16:57 schreef Frutsel het volgende:
Tambora heeft de alertstatus al verhoogd naar de ena-hoogste stand...![]()
italie rommelt het echt flink door, wist niet dat deze bevingen echt bij CF waren
quote:Possible signs of magma ascent in supervolcano Campi Flegrei
Campi Flegrei caldera (Italy): increase in uplift and temperature as possible signs of magma ascent
According to a recent report by INGV Naples, the ground deformation of the Campi Flegrei (Phlegraean Fields) near Naples has increased considerably lately. During the last 12 months, the ground in some places near the town of Pozzuoli was uplifted by about 8 cm.
The largest uplift, recorded by GPS devices, occurred during the months of July-August 2012 and since December. The trend appears to be continuing at the moment.
Such (sometimes dramatic, totaling up to several meters in a few years) ground uplift and subsidence have been known in the Phlegraean Fields since antiquity and are not a new phenomenon. They can usually be explained by normal pressure, temperature and density variations of the giant hydrothermal system of the Campi Flegrei caldera and may not necessarily indicate an imminent eruption.
However, in addition to the detected ground deformation, scientists also measured increased numbers of micro earthquakes, a rise in temperature and in particular, an increase in the proportion of the gases of magmatic origin at fumaroles in the Solfatara crater.
As the hydrothermal system is closely connected with the underlying complex magma chamber of the Phlegrean Fields, new magma movements could in fact be the culprit for the observed changes. Whether these, and if so when, will lead to a new volcanic eruption is currently uncertain.
A much larger increase of such observed changes should probably be expected if in fact should new volcanic activity was to announce itself.
The last volcanic eruption occurred after a rest period of about 3000 years in the year 1538 AD and built a new cinder cone, the Monte Nuovo ("New Mountain") near Pozzuoli.
Strong ground uplift, earthquakes and changes in springs and fumaroles preceded the eruption according to historical sources. Even though it was - geologically speaking - a rather small eruption, the effects of a similar event today would be devastating for the very densely populated area. It should be hoped that the residents and all involved are spared such a scenario, at least for the near future.
quote:Supervolcano awakening in Italy?
It looks like we may be in for an earth-shattering explosion. A dormant super volcano appears to be stirring under the Phlegraen Fields of Naples in Italy. Rising soil temperatures and surface deformation in the area have alarmed seismologists. In the distant past, volcanic super eruptions caused global climate change responsible for mass extinctions of plant and animal species.
So far, scientists are unable to model the potential consequences of an awakening super volcano.
Latest studies show that the Phlegraen Fields have actually been swelling above sea level at a rate of 3 cm per month. Micro quakes and large amounts of gases accumulated in soil indicate that the volcano may be preparing to erupt, says Vladimir Kiryanov, Assistant Professor of Geology at the St. Petersburg University.
"The Phlegraen Fields are a super volcano. Yellowstone in the United States and Toba in Indonesia are also super volcanoes capable of spewing more than 1,000 cubic km of magma. These are catastrophic eruptions. There was a huge volcanic eruption in the Phlegraen Fields some 30,000-40,000 years ago. Volcanic ash from that eruption is still found in the Mediterranean, Bulgaria, Ukraine, and even in Russia. We are now seeing the expansion of a magma pocket, which means that there might be an eruption at a certain time."
Super eruptions of such magnitude may produce the so-called “volcanic winter” effect when sulfur gases and ash will reach the stratosphere and cover the globe with thick ash clouds that solar rays will be unable to penetrate. Condensed sulfur trioxides will react with moisture, forming sulfuric acid. Downpours of sulfuric acid will hit the Earth. Scientists have obtained new evidence of a similar cataclysm following the eruption of the Toba super volcano on island of Sumatra in Indonesia about 74,000 years ago. But today, things promise to be even more devastating. Suffice it to recall the havoc wreaked by a minor increase in volcanic activity in Iceland in 2010 on air transportation over Europe.
Super eruptions occurred so rarely that it is virtually impossible to calculate the approximate time span between the first and last stages of a future potential eruption. In the 1970s, the Phlegraen Fields inflated by more than 50 cm. There were even cracks in house walls. But then the process slackened. Apparently, the fact itself that a magma chamber is being filled with magma may or may not signal any immediate eruption. Alexei Sobisevich, laboratory chief at the Institute of Volcanology and Geophysics of the Russian Academy of Sciences, shares his view:
"It actually seems to be a long-term precursor. A magma chamber may be filled up within a span ranging from decades to centuries. Many mounts grow by 5 cm per year. This is a natural process."
Some scientists hold that the volcanic system of the Earth is becoming increasingly tense and that underground cavities are full of magma threatening to burst out any moment. Whether this will be a super eruption or a string of smaller eruptions, we should prepare for the worst.
quote:Campi Flegrei nearing critical pressure point
The slumbering Campi Flegrei volcano under the Italian city of Naples shows signs of reawakening and may be nearing a critical pressure point, according to a new study.
Italian and French scientists have for the first time identified a threshold beyond which rising magma under the Earth’s surface could trigger the release of fluids and gases at a 10-fold increased rate.
This would cause the injection of high-temperature steam into surrounding rocks, said Giovanni Chiodini, a researcher at Italy’s National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology in Bologna. “Hydrothermal rocks, if heated, can ultimately lose their mechanical resistance, causing an acceleration towards critical conditions,” he told AFP by email.
He said it was not possible to say when – or if – the volcano would erupt but “it would be very dangerous” if it did for about 500,000 people living inside and near the caldera – the bowl-like depression created after a volcano blows its top.
Chiodini said there was an urgent need to obtain a better understanding of Campi Flegrei’s behaviour because of the risk to such a dense urban population.
Since 2005, Campi Flegrei has been undergoing what scientists call uplift, causing Italian authorities to raise the alert level in 2012 from green to yellow, signalling the need for active scientific monitoring. The pace of ground deformation and low-level seismic activity has recently increased.
Two other active volcanoes – Rabaul in Papua New Guinea and Sierra Negra in the Galapagos – “both showed acceleration in ground deformation before eruption with a pattern similar to that observed at Campi Flegrei,” Chiodini said.
The Campi Flegrei caldera was formed 39,000 years ago in an explosion that threw hundreds of cubic kilometres of lava, rock and debris into the air in the largest eruption in Europe in the past 200,000 years. Campi Flegrei last erupted in 1538, though on a much smaller scale.
Nearby Mount Vesuvius, which had a massive eruption in AD79 that buried several Roman settlements including Pompeii, is also classified as an active volcano.
Alhoewel ik aan de goede kant van de vulkaan zit denk ik dat een uitbarsting ook voor de Balkan geen pretje isquote:Op woensdag 21 december 2016 08:55 schreef Frutsel het volgende:
Vulkanologen: 'monster van Napels' kan rond 2020 ontwaken
Een van de engste vulkanen van Europa lijkt af te stevenen op een eruptie. Ergens rond 2020 zou de reuzenvulkaan Campi Flegrei bij Napels zijn kookpunt bereiken en tot uitbarsting kunnen komen. Dat becijferen Italiaanse vulkanologen aan de hand van gassen die uit de vulkaan ontsnappen.
Voor de rest: lees hier
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quote:Op woensdag 21 december 2016 08:59 schreef IJsmuts het volgende:
nog ff snel napels zien en dan sterven.
euhm... https://www.businessinsid(...)ernational=true&r=UKquote:Op vrijdag 23 december 2016 21:28 schreef DemonRage het volgende:
Dit bloed maar in de gaten houden dan...
http://www.ov.ingv.it/ov/(...)legrei%202017_04.pdfquote:Op maandag 15 mei 2017 22:34 schreef Frutsel het volgende:
https://m.phys.org/news/2(...)uption-possibly.html
Nieuw artikel? Maar weinig nieuws?
In feite had die regio nooit zo dichtbevolkt moeten raken. Het is nu idd maar hopen dat er geen miljoenen mensen omkomen en dat ze op tijd worden gewaarschuwd bij de komende uitbarsting vermoedelijk ergens de komende paar decennia.quote:Op maandag 22 mei 2017 06:23 schreef de_tevreden_atheist het volgende:
https://www.wired.com/201(...)italys-supervolcano/
Wanneer geef je als burgemeester van Napels het bevel tot evacuatie van 5 miljoen mensen, en wanneer beslis je of het loos alarm was zodat ze weer terug kunnen keren?
quote:Italiaans gezin komt om in vulkaangebied
De kisten waarin de slachtoffers worden weggedragen komen aan EPA
In het zuiden van Itali heeft zich bij de vulkaan Solfatara een gezinsdrama voorgedaan. Een jongen van elf klom over een hek een verboden gebied in en viel, waarschijnlijk in een krater. Zijn ouders probeerden hem te redden maar kwamen daarbij zelf om. Een broertje van zeven dat buiten de verboden zone was gebleven was getuige van het drama.
Wat de drie slachtoffers het leven heeft gekost is nog niet duidelijk. Mogelijk zijn ze onwel geworden door gassen in de krater of zijn ze omgekomen door een explosie van hete modder, vlak onder oppervlakte van de krater. De overvloedige regenval van de afgelopen dagen heeft geleid tot meer openingen in de oppervlakte van de vulkaan.
Brandende Velden
De Solfatara-krater is onderdeel van de Campi Flegrei, ofwel de Brandende Velden. De laatste eruptie was in 1198. Tegenwoordig ontsnappen regelmatig rookslierten en er doen zich van tijd tot tijd aardschokken voor. De temperatuur kan plaatselijk oplopen tot 160 graden.
Kenmerkend voor deze vulkaan zijn de fumarolen, openingen in de vulkaan waarbij de uitgestoten gassen grotendeels uit waterdamp bestaan. De overige componenten zijn ijzerverbindingen en zwavelverbindingen.
De Brandende Velden zijn een toeristische attractie in de regio Napels. De velden worden ook veel bezocht door schoolklassen. Door het hele gebied staan waarschuwingsborden en gevaarlijke stukken zijn door hekken omsloten.
Wotquote:Scientists locate potential magma source in Italian supervolcano
Scientists have now pinpointed the location of the hot zone where hot materials rose to feed the caldera during its last period of activity in the 1980s. Credit: University of Aberdeen
Scientists have found the first direct evidence of a so-called 'hot zone' feeding a supervolcano in southern Italy that experts say is nearing eruption conditions.
Campi Flegrei is a volcanic caldera to the west of Naples that last erupted centuries ago.
The area has been relatively quiet since the 1980s when the injection of either magma or fluids in the shallower structure of the volcano caused a series of small earthquakes.
Using seismological techniques, scientists have now pinpointed the location of the hot zone where hot materials rose to feed the caldera during this period.
The study was led by Dr Luca De Siena at the University of Aberdeen in conjunction with the INGV Osservatorio Vesuviano, the RISSC lab of the University of Naples, and the University of Texas at Austin. The research provides a benchmark that may help predict how and where future eruptions could strike.
"One question that has puzzled scientists is where magma is located beneath the caldera, and our study provides the first evidence of a hot zone under the city of Pozzuoli that extends into the sea at a depth of 4 km," Dr De Siena said.
"While this is the most probable location of a small batch of magma, it could also be the heated fluid-filled top of a wider magma chamber, located even deeper."
Dr De Siena's study suggests that magma was prevented from rising to the surface in the 1980s by the presence of a 1-2 km-deep rock formation that blocked its path, forcing it to release stress along a lateral route.
While the implications of this are still not fully understood, the relatively low amount of seismic activity in the area since the 1980s suggests that pressure is building within the caldera, making it more dangerous.
"During the last 30 years the behaviour of the volcano has changed, with everything becoming hotter due to fluids permeating the entire caldera," Dr De Siena explained.
"Whatever produced the activity under Pozzuoli in the 1980s has migrated somewhere else, so the danger doesn't just lie in the same spot, it could now be much nearer to Naples which is more densely populated.
"This means that the risk from the caldera is no longer just in the centre, but has migrated. Indeed, you can now characterise Campi Flegrei as being like a boiling pot of soup beneath the surface.
"What this means in terms of the scale of any future eruption we cannot say, but there is no doubt that the volcano is becoming more dangerous.
"The big question we have to answer now is if it is a big layer of magma that is rising to the surface, or something less worrying which could find its way to the surface out at sea."
Kut, die gaat dus al binnen 3483479 jaar ontploffen!quote:
quote:Magma building beneath dangerous supervolcano could signal huge eruption
One of the world’s most dangerous supervolcanoes appears to be accumulating magma as it transitions to a pre-eruption state, a study has found. Scientists do not say that a large eruption is imminent—but they do suggest that current conditions at Campi Flegrei indicate one could happen at "some undetermined point in the future."
Campi Flegrei is one of the few active supervolcanoes in the world. It is located in southern Italy, about nine miles to the west of Naples, which is home to around 1.5 million people. The last time it erupted was in 1538—a fairly small event known as the Monte Nuovo eruption. However, 40,000 years ago, it produced a "super-colossal" eruption, which is just one down from the “mega-colossal” eruptions recorded at Yellowstone.
Over the last 60 years, the volcanic region—which is made up of 24 craters and edifices—has shown signs of unrest, and scientists have been studying it and monitoring it closely to better understand the changes taking place.
In a study published in Science Advances, a team of researchers led by Francesca Forni, from ETH Zurich in Switzerland, examined rock, mineral and glass samples taken from 23 eruptions at Campi Flegrei—including the two biggest from the last 60,000 years. By analyzing the elements within these samples, the researchers were able to construct a picture of what was happening before and after eruptions.
Their findings appear to show that magma is building beneath the volcanic system—and that it is entering a new caldera cycle. This could indicate that the volcano is moving toward a new phase that will result in a large eruption at the site, the team says. The study does not indicate that an eruption will happen soon.
Analysis of the elements suggest there were critical changes to the temperature and water content of the magma at certain points in the eruptive history of Campi Flegrei. Minerals in the magma were found to decrease over time, while water content increased. They found that this happened before the Monte Nuovo eruption.
The team notes that after the Monte Nuovo eruption, Campi Flegrei entered a “new phase” of inactivity. Since the 1950s, there have been three “major periods of unrest,” raising concern that the volcano is reawakening. The movement of magma from depths of about five miles to 1.8 miles has previously been blamed for this unrest.
The latest findings suggest this is consistent with the presence of water-saturated magma in the upper crust, allowing for the build up of a huge magma reservoir. “We propose that the subvolcanic plumbing system at Campi Flegrei is currently entering a new build-up phase, potentially culminating, at some undetermined point in the future, in a large volume eruption,” they conclude.
Luca De Siena, from the U.K.’s University of Aberdeen, who has previously published research on the Campi Flegrei system, commented on the findings: “At Campi Flegrei, an outstanding question is why we cannot see the plumbing systems of the volcano below 4-5km (2.5-3 mile) depths, as at Yellowstone caldera, for example,” he told Newsweek.
“Forni et al. suggest that a large, highly-evolved, and relatively cold magma layer may be absorbing most of the energy we send down to reconstruct deeper structures. This problem is typical of sub-basaltic, oceanic settings, where deeper reservoirs are invisible to seismic imaging. Their findings open the possibility to model the effects of these magmatic layers on monitoring recording, thus allowing to reconstruct their shape and dimensions and eventually see below them.”
Volcanologist Christopher Kilburn, from the U.K.'s UCL, who was also not involved in the study, said the results are consistent with observed changes that took plalce during past eruptions: "It thus provides an alternative interpretation to be tested against conventional ideas," he said.
"Should an eruption occur, the best guess is that it will have a size and behaviour similar to that seen during past 15,000 years or so--hence ranging from the size of the last eruption (Monte Nuovo, 1538, 0.02 cubic km) to something similar to the eruption of Vesuvius that overwhelmed Pompeii and Herculaneum (c. one cubic km). These are the scenarios being used to prepare mitigation plans.
"The paper changes tack in its final paragraph. Having argued that the 1538 eruption represents the squeezing out of magma from the vestige of a magma reservoir, it suggests that CO2 emissions indicate the possible replenishment of the reservoir and, thus, hints at the possible start of a build-up to a 'large-volume eruption.' This statement is speculative and does not depend on the preceding results."
10 jaar is naar verhouding een paar seconden voor een vulkaan.quote:Op donderdag 15 november 2018 09:39 schreef Lothiriel het volgende:
Heb dit topic nu even gelezen & het bestaat al bijna 10 jaar nu en in elk bericht staat dat de vulkaan gaat uitbarsten en het is nog steeds niet gebeurd
Heb zo het idee dat ze er weinig over weten en snappen en dus maar wat onheilsberichten de wereld in slingeren. Als het gebeurt dan gebeurt het he, de mens kan een vulkaanuitbarsing niet stoppen
Weet ik, maar dat maakt juist dat onheilberichten geen enkel nut hebbenquote:Op donderdag 15 november 2018 09:47 schreef nogeenoudebekende het volgende:
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10 jaar is naar verhouding een paar seconden voor een vulkaan.
In bijna alle artikelen staat ook dat het gaat gebeuren maar dat het ook over 200 jaar kan gaan gebeurenquote:Op donderdag 15 november 2018 09:39 schreef Lothiriel het volgende:
Heb dit topic nu even gelezen & het bestaat al bijna 10 jaar nu en in elk bericht staat dat de vulkaan gaat uitbarsten en het is nog steeds niet gebeurd
Heb zo het idee dat ze er weinig over weten en snappen en dus maar wat onheilsberichten de wereld in slingeren. Als het gebeurt dan gebeurt het he, de mens kan een vulkaanuitbarsing niet stoppen
Oke fair enoughquote:Op donderdag 15 november 2018 10:09 schreef Frutsel het volgende:
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In bijna alle artikelen staat ook dat het gaat gebeuren maar dat het ook over 200 jaar kan gaan gebeurenIn 2020 zou een zogenaamde "tusseneruptie" kunnen plaatsvinden. (Zie artikel Volkskrant vandaag die ik niet ga (mag) linken). Een eruptie op kleinere schaal maar de grote klapper zou over enkele honderden jaren zo maar kunnen. Op de schaal van een supervulkaan is dat 'best dichtbij'.
Ik durf deze uitspraak ook gerust te doen over alle andere vulkanen ter wereld, actief of niet..quote:Op donderdag 15 november 2018 09:12 schreef Frutsel het volgende:
Scientists do not say that a large eruption is imminent—but they do suggest that current conditions at Campi Flegrei indicate one could happen at "some undetermined point in the future."
Had ik ook hoor.. tot een jaar of wat terug... ik kende alleen Etna en Big Brother Vesuvius.. maar schijnbaar ligt er nog een groter gevaar op de loer daarquote:Op donderdag 15 november 2018 10:18 schreef Lothiriel het volgende:
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Oke fair enoughInteressant is het zeker! Een eruptie lijkt me wel cool om te kunnen observeren maar niet als het zo veel dood en verderf zou zaaien. Klinkt wel als iets waar ik me verder in wil verdiepen, had eerlijk gezegd nog nooit over deze grotere caldera vulkaan gehoord
Tja,waar lijkt dat ook weer op??Hmmmmmmmm!Oja de klimaathysterie..quote:Op donderdag 15 november 2018 09:39 schreef Lothiriel het volgende:
Heb dit topic nu even gelezen & het bestaat al bijna 10 jaar nu en in elk bericht staat dat de vulkaan gaat uitbarsten en het is nog steeds niet gebeurd
Heb zo het idee dat ze er weinig over weten en snappen en dus maar wat onheilsberichten de wereld in slingeren. Als het gebeurt dan gebeurt het he, de mens kan een vulkaanuitbarsing niet stoppen
Heb jij vakantie op de fp?quote:Op zaterdag 8 december 2018 10:29 schreef Galantfan het volgende:
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Tja,waar lijkt dat ook weer op??Hmmmmmmmm!Oja de klimaathysterie..
Hoezo?Moet dat?quote:Op zaterdag 8 december 2018 10:52 schreef nogeenoudebekende het volgende:
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Heb jij vakantie op de fp?
Terwijl dat een vaststaand iets is en duidelijk al zichtbaar is. Heel wat anders dus hou die onzin bij je svp. Je klinkt net als Trump (en dat wil je niet).quote:
Oja?Zeker van de grafieken van de IPCC?Wat een POLITIEKE organisatie is,geen wetenschappelijke!Alleen opgericht om te PROBEREN om de waanzin van de z.g. CO 2 toename om te zetten in de verdeling van geld over de wereld,meer niet!Ze hebben zelf dat gezegd.Heeft niets met milieu te maken.quote:Op zondag 16 december 2018 13:36 schreef bianconeri het volgende:
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Terwijl dat een vaststaand iets is en duidelijk al zichtbaar is. Heel wat anders dus hou die onzin bij je svp. Je klinkt net als Trump (en dat wil je niet).
Ik ben milieukundige xD.quote:Op zondag 16 december 2018 14:05 schreef Galantfan het volgende:
Oja?Zeker van de grafieken van de IPCC?Wat een POLITIEKE organisatie is,geen wetenschappelijke!Alleen opgericht om te PROBEREN om de waanzin van de z.g. CO 2 toename om te zetten in de verdeling van geld over de wereld,meer niet!Ze hebben zelf dat gezegd.Heeft niets met milieu te maken.
Steden zijn van oudsher gebouwd bij vulkanen vanwege de vruchtbare grond.quote:Op zaterdag 17 november 2018 10:32 schreef Rolstoelvandaal het volgende:
Ik blijf het toch maar raar vinden dat er zoveel mensen midden in een actieve vulkaan wonen. Je ziet de gassen of de borrelende modder op meters van hun huizen. Ondanks alle onderzoek zou die vulkaan zomaar morgen voor problemen kunnen zorgen. Ik zou er niet willen wonen.
quote:Vesuvius earthquakes are no reason to worry
Since about Oct last year (2018), the number of registered micro-quakes under the volcano seems to have increased. Small swarms of tiny quakes have been reported more frequently in various media and can be seen on the published data of the volcano observatory.
One such small swarm can e seen ongoing at the moment, but its significance is highly questionable:
1 They do not carry a signature of magma movement at depth: All are very shallow (0-2 km typically) and extremely small, rarely exceeding magnitude 1 (and no single quake has reached magnitude 3 during more than a year!). Most of them are either caused by human activities in the vicinity of the volcano, while others are from the volcano's normal behavior in its current dormant stage: small adjustments of fluid pressure in the upper hydrothermal system or other factors near the surface, but not magma movements in the deeper reservoir.
2 The visible increase is likely also an artifact caused by improved monitoring devices - earlier, such small tremors could not have been recorded. Vesuvius is probably the most monitored volcano in the world and even the tiniest earth movement is being recorded today.
3 The Volcano Observatory which has a very close eye on the volcano emphasizes repeatedly that the volcano is currently quiet and in normal state. Interpreting these events otherwise should be considered fear-mongering without justified cause.
While it is utmost important to closely monitor a volcano such as Vesuvius, it should be stressed that these quakes are no sign of an impending eruption and are not a reason to worry in particular. Although the volcano almost certainly will erupt again in some future (which could be decades to centuries from now), there is no other sign that Vesuvius is currently becoming more restless.
vermoedelijk omdat het topic niet zo rap gaat...quote:Op zondag 11 juni 2023 17:01 schreef crystal_meth het volgende:
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Euh, ik kan niet posten in dat topic (krijg geen invulveld, en ook geen boodschap "er is al ... dagen niet gepost, klik hier als je toch...").
En als ik n van de posts daar quote krijg ik dezelfde "interface" als bij een gesloten topic (maw geen "preview" of "invoer" button).
https://www.theguardian.c(...)ng-point-study-findsquote:Parts of Italian volcano ‘stretched nearly to breaking point’, study findsParts of Italian volcano ‘stretched nearly to breaking point’, study finds
Campi Flegrei (Phlegraean Fields) near Naples is now in ‘extremely dangerous’ state, say academic experts
Half a million people live on a sprawling volcano in Italy – and the risk of an eruption has never been greater, according to a study.
The Campi Flegrei (Phlegraean Fields) volcano may be less well-known than Vesuvius, but is “extremely dangerous”, study co-author Stefano Carlino told AFP.
Vesuvius wiped Pompeii off the map almost two millennia ago, while the vast volcanic Campi Flegrei area near Naples last spewed lava, ashes and rocks in 1538. But the Campi Flegrei is not one to take lightly – the volcano’s eruption 30,000 years ago is reported to have contributed to the extinction of Neanderthal man.
It can seem less dangerous than it is because, instead of growing into a traditional mountain, the volcano has the shape of a gentle depression 7.5-8.5 miles (12-14km) across. A resurgence of activity in the early 1980s led to the evacuation of 40,000 inhabitants, but the volcano has been relatively quiet since then.
“We’re not saying there will be an eruption, we are saying that the conditions for an eruption are more favourable,” Christopher Kilburn from University College London told AFP.
The tens of thousands of small earthquakes that have taken place since the 1950s weakened the caldera, the basin at the top of the volcano.
And the report – published in Nature’s Communications Earth & Environment journal on Friday – found “parts of the volcano had been stretched nearly to breaking point”.
The quakes have been increasing in number since 2019, while the pressure below has been building. The coastal town of Pozzuoli has been lifted by nearly four metres (13ft) – roughly the height of a doubledecker bus – since the 1950s, it said. The tremors and ground uplift are cumulative, meaning volcanic activity does not need to intensify for an eruption to become more likely.
“An eventual eruption could be preceded by relatively weak signals, such as a smaller rate of ground uplift and fewer earthquakes,” the study’s authors said. They point to the eruption of the Rabaul caldera in Papua New Guinea in 1994, which was preceded by small earthquakes occurring at a 10th of the rate than had occurred during a crisis a decade before.
The probability of a big eruption occurring is “very low”, Carlino said. “What is more likely are small eruptions.”
And while the volcano is closer to rupture, that does not necessarily mean an eruption will take place, Kilburn said. Even if the crust cracks, “the magma needs to be pushing up at the right location for the eruption to occur”, he said.
The researchers used a model based on the physics of how rocks break and applied it in real time to the volcano, which is flat and mostly hidden – either under buildings or coastal waters.
They measured the tremors and ground movements and compared them with previous eruptions of other, similar volcanoes.
“We cannot say with certainty what will happen, what matters is being prepared for any eventuality,” Carlino said.
Five hundred thousand people live in what Italy’s civil protection agency has designated the red zone – the area at highest risk. Another 800,000 people live in the yellow zone.
Authorities have drawn up an evacuation plan, under which residents will be moved out using their own or public transport within three days. The risk level – green, yellow, orange and red – is reviewed monthly.
“The alert level in Pozzuoli is currently yellow,” council spokesperson Giordana Mobilio told AFP, adding that locals receive alerts for all tremors of a magnitude of 1.5 or greater.
Als het plotseling stil wordt dan zijn de rapen gaar, want dat is een teken dat de opbouwende druk nergens meer heen kan.quote:"An eventual eruption could be preceded by relatively weak signals, such as a smaller rate of ground uplift and fewer earthquakes,"
quote:Italian supervolcano may erupt after more than 500 years - study
Researchers emphasize that further investigation is needed to accurately predict the occurrence of an eruption.
The Campi Flegrei supervolcano in southern Italy has reportedly weakened, increasing the likelihood of an eruption, according to new research conducted by University College London (UCL) and Italy's National Research Insititute for Geophysics and Volcanology (INGV).
Using an innovative model that analyzes earthquake patterns and ground uplift, the peer-reviewed study, published in the journal Nature's Communications Earth & Environment, found that certain parts of the volcano have been stretched to the point of potential rupture. However, the researchers emphasize that further investigation is needed to accurately predict the occurrence of an eruption.
The Campi Flegrei volcano has exhibited signs of unrest for over 70 years, with periods of intensified activity in the 1950s, 70s and 80s, followed by a slower phase of unrest in the past decade.
During these periods, tens of thousands of small earthquakes have occurred and the coastal town of Pozzuoli has experienced an uplift of nearly 4 meters (13 feet), equivalent to the height of a double-decker bus.
The study employed a model developed at UCL to assess volcano fracturing. By analyzing earthquake patterns and ground uplift, the researchers concluded that certain sections of the volcano are nearing the breaking point.
Campi Flegrei volcano is moving closer to rupture, not guaranteeing an eruption
Professor Christopher Kilburn, lead author and UCL Earth sciences expert, explained that while the study confirms the Campi Flegrei volcano is moving closer to rupture, it does not guarantee an eruption.
"The rupture may open a crack through the crust, but the magma still needs to be pushing up at the right location for an eruption to occur," he explained. "This is the first time we have applied our model, which is based on the physics of how rocks break, in real-time to any volcano.
This study represents the first application of the model in real-time to an active volcano. Professor Kilburn highlighted the model's accuracy, as it correctly predicted the increasing number of small earthquakes associated with Campi Flegrei's unrest. Adjustments will now be made to improve estimates of the likelihood of new routes being formed for magma or gas to reach the surface.
Dr. Nicola Alessandro Pino from the Vesuvius Observatory, representing the INGV in Naples, emphasized the volcano's weakening state. Despite smaller stresses compared to the last major crisis 40 years ago, parts of the volcano are becoming more vulnerable to rupture.
Campi Flegrei is unique in that it does not resemble a typical volcano. Instead of forming a traditional mountain, it takes the shape of a gentle depression spanning 12-14 kilometers (7.5-8.5 miles), known as a caldera. This unique structure has led to the establishment of a community of 360,000 people on its surface.
Over the past decade, the ground beneath Pozzuoli has been gradually rising at a rate of approximately 10 centimeters (4 inches) per year. Additionally, a significant number of small earthquakes have been recorded since the mid-1980s, with April registering the highest monthly count of over 600.
These disturbances are attributed to the movement of fluids approximately 3 kilometers (2 miles) below the surface, possibly including molten rock (magma) and volcanic gas. The ongoing phase of unrest appears to be driven by magmatic gas seeping into rock fractures, permeating the 3-kilometer-thick crust.
The earthquakes result from faults slipping due to crustal stretching. Analysis of earthquake patterns from 2020 suggests that the rock is exhibiting inelastic behavior, breaking rather than bending.
Dr. Stefania Danesi from INGV Bologna highlighted the challenge of deciphering underground activities and the reliance on interpreting clues provided by the volcano, such as earthquakes and ground uplift.
The researchers emphasized that the unrest observed since the 1950s has cumulative effects. Consequently, an eruption may be preceded by weaker indicators, such as a reduced rate of ground uplift and fewer earthquakes.
The researchers stressed that an eruption is not inevitable. Dr. Stefano Carlino from the Vesuvius Observatory explained that, like other volcanoes that have remained dormant for generations, Campi Flegrei might establish a new pattern of gentle uplift and subsidence or return to a state of rest. Preparedness for all possible outcomes is crucial.
Als iets als dit uitbarst vraag ik me af of een rampenplan voor een dorpje in de buurt berhaupt enige zin heeftquote:Op vrijdag 16 juni 2023 16:46 schreef MissButterflyy het volgende:
Toevallig nog geweest een paar dagen geleden en er wonen echt heel veel mensen in dat gebied. Mocht de vulkaan uitbarsten is dat een enorme ramp.
Er liggen schijnbaar 5 dorpen vlakbij waarvan 3 niet eens een rampenplan hebben gemaakt mocht het tot een uitbarsting komen.
Naples en omgeving is prachtig en de mensen zijn heel vriendelijk maar ook zeer chaotisch, veel zaken daar hebben ze niet op orde.
Laten we hopen dat de uitbarsting nog wat honderden of duizenden jaren op zich laat wachten.
Uiteraard. Maar stel je voor: alles wijst erop dat die uitbarsting snel komt omdat een groot oppervlak grond omhoog komt. Moet je dan niet een plan van aanpak hebben?quote:Op vrijdag 16 juni 2023 16:55 schreef heywoodu het volgende:
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Als iets als dit uitbarst vraag ik me af of een rampenplan voor een dorpje in de buurt berhaupt enige zin heeft
Jezelf redden en op een vlucht naar Australi springen.quote:Op vrijdag 16 juni 2023 17:58 schreef MissButterflyy het volgende:
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Uiteraard. Maar stel je voor: alles wijst erop dat die uitbarsting snel komt omdat een groot oppervlak grond omhoog komt. Moet je dan niet een plan van aanpak hebben?
Dat is ook een caldera, idd.quote:Op vrijdag 16 juni 2023 18:11 schreef Netsplitter het volgende:
Eigenlijk precies hetzelfde als wat ik lees/hoor over Yellowstone.
quote:The Campi Flegrei volcano in southern Italy is weakening and potentially erupting.
There are enormous calderas with a width of more than 5 km at one in ten historically active volcanoes. These volcanoes frequently experience several periods of instability over many years before erupting, depending on their forerunners’ additive impacts. As a result of the potential for structural changes in the crust, these episodes have the potential to sow discord and invalidate traditional eruption predictions.
Researchers from the National Research Institute for Geophysics and Volcanology (INGV) in Italy and the University of California, Los Angeles (UCL) have found that the Campi Flegrei volcano in southern Italy is deteriorating and more prone to erupting.
Volcanoes that reawaken after a long period of dormancy shatter the crust before magma can erupt. Repeatable seismicity fluctuations with ground movement precede rupture, tracing applied stress from local earthquakes. Since 2004, a rupturing sequence has developed at Italy’s Campi Flegrei caldera.
The volcano last erupted in 1538 and has been unrest-free for more than 70 years, with two-year increases in the 1950s, 1970s, and 1980s and a slower period in the past ten years. During these times, tens of thousands of minor earthquakes have occurred, and the coastal town of Pozzuoli has risen by almost 4 meters.
The study, published in Nature Communications Earth & Environment, used a fracturing volcano model created at UCL to evaluate earthquakes and ground uplift patterns and determined that portions of the volcano had been stretched nearly to breaking point.
Lead author Professor Christopher Kilburn (UCL Earth Sciences) said, “Our new study confirms that Campi Flegrei is moving closer to rupture. However, this does not guarantee an eruption. The breach may have opened a break in the crust, but magma must still be moving up in the appropriate place for an eruption.
The study is the first of its sort to forecast a rupture at an active volcano, marking a significant step forward in their goal of improving eruption forecasts worldwide.
They used the model for the first time in 2017. Campi Flegrei has behaved exactly as they predicted, with an increasing number of small earthquakes indicating pressure from below.
They will now have to revise our procedures for estimating the likelihood of new routes for magma or gas reaching the surface.
Dr. Nicola Alessandro Pino from the Vesuvius Observatory, representing the INGV in Naples, said, “Our results show that parts of the volcano are weakening. This means it might break even though the stresses pulling it apart are smaller than during the last crisis 40 years ago.”
Campi Flegrei is the nearest active volcano to London, with a mild depression 12-14 km across that explains why 360,000 people live on its roof.
The ground beneath Pozzuoli has been rising at around 10 cm (4 in) per year for the past decade. Persistent minor earthquakes have also been recorded for the first time since the mid-1980s. The flow of fluids around 3 km (2 miles) beneath the surface, some of which may be molten rock, magma, or natural volcanic gas, has created the disruption.
De hele aarde krijgt dan de kleur van dit forumquote:Op dinsdag 4 juli 2023 10:34 schreef Starhopper het volgende:
Hoe gevaarlijk is deze vulkaan? Wat gaan we merken als hij tot uitbarsting komt?
quote:Op dinsdag 4 juli 2023 10:46 schreef Hatseflats22 het volgende:
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De hele aarde krijgt dan de kleur van dit forum
Afhankelijk van het soort uitbarsting en de duur ervan... dit soort vulkanen zijn in staat om kleine uitbarstingen te produceren die op kleine schaal en regionaal voor problemen kan zorgen. Zoals omleiding vliegverkeer, kleine evacuatiesquote:Op dinsdag 4 juli 2023 10:34 schreef Starhopper het volgende:
Hoe gevaarlijk is deze vulkaan? Wat gaan we merken als hij tot uitbarsting komt?
Ooh dus een uitbarstende supervulkaan gaat niet altijd met een enorme BIEM. Dat neemt wat zorgen weg. Laten we hopen op een mooie uitbarsting zonder al teveel narigheid maar wel toffe plaatjes.quote:Op dinsdag 4 juli 2023 10:48 schreef Frutsel het volgende:
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Afhankelijk van het soort uitbarsting en de duur ervan... dit soort vulkanen zijn in staat om kleine uitbarstingen te produceren die op kleine schaal en regionaal voor problemen kan zorgen. Zoals omleiding vliegverkeer, kleine evacuaties
Tevens kunnen de uitbarstingen groter zijn waarbij je moet denken aan een grotere straal rondom het eruptie punt waar zich magma/lava naar toe verplaatst, zware asval in de regio, weken lang vliegverkeer, honderdduizenden evacuees
Maar worst-case scenario is een complete uitbarsting die weken duurt waarbij de complete baai platgelegd wordt, miljoenen moeten verhuizen en dan kom je op een situatie dat er zoveel as in de lucht kan komen dat de zon wordt geblockt en mogelijk een jaar zonder-zomer / geen daglicht / geen fotosynthese meer / planten dood etc etc
Wereldwijde afkoeling/ramp.
Maar goed, laatst genoemde lijkt minst waarschijnlijke maar supervulkanen kunnen dat veroorzaken. Naar verluidt zijn er 7 op aarde waar dit er n van is en Yellowstone de bekendste is.
Laatste eruptie van een supervulkaan was Toba zo'n 70000 jaar geleden.
Mwah.. zijn nu onlangs wel een aantal 4+ bevingen geweest inderdaadquote:Op dinsdag 3 oktober 2023 12:31 schreef MissButterflyy het volgende:
Worden de bevingen nu steeds zwaarder?
vooralsnog niet... maar ja... kan volgende maand anders zijn, of volgend jaarquote:Op dinsdag 3 oktober 2023 15:00 schreef summer2bird het volgende:
Denken jullie dat er echt kans is op een ontploffing?
Of we krijgen een nieuwe vulkaan, volgens wikipedia:quote:Op dinsdag 3 oktober 2023 15:00 schreef summer2bird het volgende:
Denken jullie dat er echt kans is op een ontploffing?
quote:Als de spanning in de vulkaan opnieuw stijgt kan deze op twee manieren tot uitbarsting komen:
- er vormt zich een nieuwe vulkaan boven op de caldeira, bijvoorbeeld Vesuvius bij de Campi Fleigrei
- de hele top van de vulkaan wordt eraf geblazen in de nieuwe uitbarsting, bijvoorbeeld Mount Saint Helens.
quote:Zoals verwacht bevestigde het wekelijkse bulletin van het Vesuvian Observatorium dat er de afgelopen dagen een aanzienlijke toename is waargenomen in de snelheid van het grond optillen. Dit is de oorzaak van de duidelijke toename van de seismiciteit.
https://www.theguardian.c(...)kes-evacuation-plansquote:Italy plans for mass evacuation as quakes continue around supervolcano
The Italian government is planning for a possible mass evacuation of tens of thousands of people who live around the Campi Flegrei supervolcano near Naples.
The new measures, which include a scheme to check on the strength of buildings in the area after months of repeated earthquakes, will be discussed at a cabinet meeting on Thursday, a government statement said.
Campi Flegrei (Phlegraean Fields) lies to the west of Naples and is dotted with towns and villages, including Pozzuoli, Agnano and Bacoli, which have a combined population of more than 500,000.
The caldera is dotted with 24 craters and is a much bigger volcano than the nearby Vesuvius, which destroyed the ancient Roman city of Pompeii in AD79.
It has been jolted by more than 1,100 earthquakes in the past month alone, including a 4.0 magnitude quake on Monday and a 4.2 last week – the strongest in the area for four decades.
Experts say the increased seismic activity is probably linked to a phenomenon known as bradyseism, when the earth rises or falls, depending on the cycle, caused by the filling or emptying of underground magma chambers.
There is not an imminent threat of an eruption, most volcanologists say, but with the ground currently rising by 1.5cm (0.59 inches) a month, there is concern about the impact on local buildings.
The civil protection minister, Nello Musumeci, said this week evacuations would be triggered only in case of “extreme necessity”.
The cabinet was also expected to direct more resources to local civil protection agencies to ensure they could swiftly intervene in case of emergency and to fund a communication campaign to raise public awareness, Musumeci said.
Local media reported that a group of hospitals in the area would start evacuation tests from Friday to make sure they were ready to face stronger quakes or eruptions.
The last time Campi Flegrei suffered a comparable burst of earthquakes was in the 1980s. On that occasion, 40,000 people were temporarily evacuated from nearby Pozzuoli.
The last significant eruption was in 1538. One of its biggest eruptions took place 39,000 years ago and may have led to the extinction of Neanderthal man, researchers say. Magma from that blast has been found in Greenland, 2,800 miles (4,500km) away.
Dit topic beweegt met geologische snelheid.quote:Op vrijdag 6 oktober 2023 13:04 schreef Gajes_Octavianus het volgende:
112 posts in dit bijna 13 jaar oude topic
Hopelijk barst ie niet uit voor dit topic vol is.
Voorlopig niet dus
Hopelijk valt het mee allemaal…quote:Op vrijdag 6 oktober 2023 16:00 schreef Momo het volgende:
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[ afbeelding ]
Schijnbaar was er ook een piek in 1980, maar we zitten nu ondertussen hoger...
Napels zelf is ook gewoon de sigaar als dit mis gaat. Maar goed, die hebben misschien iets langer de tijd.quote:Op vrijdag 6 oktober 2023 11:03 schreef crystal_meth het volgende:
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https://www.theguardian.c(...)kes-evacuation-plans
Klopt. Wel zonde als het zou gebeuren, het is echt een bijzondere en op veel plekken mooie stad.quote:Op vrijdag 6 oktober 2023 16:21 schreef Nattekat het volgende:
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Napels zelf is ook gewoon de sigaar als dit mis gaat. Maar goed, die hebben misschien iets langer de tijd.
Helaas de slechtst geplaatste stad ter wereld.quote:Op vrijdag 6 oktober 2023 17:12 schreef MissButterflyy het volgende:
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Klopt. Wel zonde als het zou gebeuren, het is echt een bijzondere en op veel plekken mooie stad.
Mwah.......quote:Op vrijdag 6 oktober 2023 18:04 schreef Nattekat het volgende:
[..]
Helaas de slechtst geplaatste stad ter wereld.
Sowieso Mexico-Stad.quote:
Die stad is idd dom geplaatst, maar ik denk niet dat die stad uit het niets weggevaagd kan worden.quote:
Weinig doms aan, was een perfecte locatie toen het nog Tenochtitlan was. Maar ja, Europeanen en dus alles naar de kloten.quote:Op vrijdag 6 oktober 2023 19:33 schreef Nattekat het volgende:
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Die stad is idd dom geplaatst, maar ik denk niet dat die stad uit het niets weggevaagd kan worden.
Huh? Dat klopt toch niet? Gerommel betekent bewegend magma en om een uitbarsting te krijgen heb je bewegend magma nodig...quote:Op zondag 8 oktober 2023 19:08 schreef DemonRage het volgende:
Gerommel is alleen maar goed.
Een vulkaan is net als een klein kind: wanneer het opeens opvallend stil wordt dan is er stront aan de knikker.
Als gerommel plotseling stopt (i.t.t. afbouwen) dan betekent dat dat het magma geen kant meer op kan, er geen rek meer in de bodem zit en de druk gevaarlijk opbouwt. Dit is, zeg maar, de stilte voor de storm.quote:Op zaterdag 14 oktober 2023 12:10 schreef Multatilu het volgende:
[..]
Huh? Dat klopt toch niet? Gerommel betekent bewegend magma en om een uitbarsting te krijgen heb je bewegend magma nodig...
Weet niet of dat voor elk soort vulkaan geldt. Maar het rommelt nog door bij de Campi Flegreiquote:Op zondag 8 oktober 2023 19:08 schreef DemonRage het volgende:
Gerommel is alleen maar goed.
Een vulkaan is net als een klein kind: wanneer het opeens opvallend stil wordt dan is er stront aan de knikker.
quote:M3.6 earthquake and new seismic swarm recorded in Campi Flegrei supervolcano, Italy
An earthquake with a magnitude of 3.6 0.3 was recorded in Campi Flegrei, Italy, at 12:36 UTC on October 16, 2023, coinciding with the start of a new earthquake swarm. The event comes amid rising concerns over the area’s seismic activity.
The quake hit at a depth of 1.9 km (1.2 miles) and coincided with the start of a new earthquake swarm, as reported by the Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV). It was preceded by M1.4 at 03:31 UTC on October 16, M1.9 at 17:59 UTC on October 15, and M1.4 at 14:18 UTC on October 15.
It was felt by the local population, with many reporting it on social media.
Today’s seismic activity adds to a trend of increasing disturbances in the region, punctuated by a series of new safety measures announced by the Italian cabinet on October 5, including the possible evacuation of tens of thousands of people.
These measures follow months of seismic activity that has featured more than 1 100 earthquakes, including one with a magnitude of 4.2, the strongest in the region in the last 40 years.
Geologists have linked the rising seismic events to a geological phenomenon known as bradyseism. Currently, the ground around Campi Flegrei is experiencing an uplift rate of 1.5 cm (0.6 inches) per month, bringing attention to the structural integrity of buildings in the surrounding area.
Nello Musumeci, the Civil Protection Minister, mentioned that evacuations would only occur in extreme cases. The government is also preparing to allocate additional resources to local civil protection agencies to enable prompt responses during emergencies. Moreover, there are plans to start a public awareness campaign to educate residents about the ongoing seismic issues.
Preemptive measures include evacuation tests to be conducted by local hospitals. Mauro Di Vito, Director of the INGV Vesuvian Observatory, stated that geophysical and geochemical indicators are under constant scrutiny. At this point, the data, including a soil uplift speed of 15 mm (0.6 inches) per month, suggests no significant changes in the system for the short term.
Campi Flegrei covers a 13 km (8 miles) wide caldera that encompasses part of Naples, with a population of 3 million, and extends south into the Gulf of Pozzuoli. The area is no stranger to seismic activity; episodes of bradyseism and seismic swarms have been observed particularly during 1969–72 and 1982–84. During these periods, nearly 40 000 people were temporarily evacuated from the nearby town of Pozzuoli.
In recent months, the ground uplift in the Rione Terra area reached approximately 113 cm (44 inches). The supervolcano’s last significant eruption was in 1538 (VEI 3), but its most devastating eruption occurred around 39 000 years ago. This cataclysmic event dispersed magma as far as 4 500 km (2,796 miles), reaching Greenland.
This adds to the ongoing concerns about the state of seismic activity in the Campi Flegrei region, as well as the preparedness level of nearby communities for future geological events.
quote:Dreiging supervulkaan noopt Itali tot actie: 'Hier zijn geen vluchtwegen'
Op het drukke dorpsplein van Monte di Procida, even ten westen van Napels, gaat het in de gesprekken na de zondagsmis eigenlijk maar over een onderwerp: de aardschokken die de laatste weken frequent te voelen zijn.
"Het is altijd voorbij voordat je 't weet", vertelt inwoner Giuseppe Lalli (67). "Meestal blijf ik in bed liggen." Maar enige bezorgdheid is er zeker wel, zegt zijn buurvrouw Armida Mancino. "Schokken van deze grootte hebben we hier de laatste 40 jaar niet meer gevoeld."
Voortdurend gemonitord
Het is niet de eerste keer dat inwoners te maken krijgen met bevingen. De oude Grieken, die de regio ook al bewoonden, noemden het gebied niet voor niets de Campi Flegrei, oftewel brandende velden. De bodem bestaat uit ondergrondse vulkanen die kilometers diep onder de grond met elkaar in verbinding staan. Tussen de bebouwing herinneren kraters aan eerdere uitbarstingen.
"Deze krater ontstond bijvoorbeeld door een explosieve uitbarsting 4000 jaar geleden", zegt vulkanoloog Giuseppe Mastrolorenzo. Hij wijst de plekken aan waar het Italiaanse vulkanologische instituut sensoren plaatste om de bevingen te monitoren. "Dit is een van de best gemonitorde gebieden ter wereld."
En toch, zegt hij, is het onmogelijk om te weten wat de zogeheten supervulkaan in petto heeft. "De bodem stijgt en door die druk ontstaan er aardbevingen. Er komt meer gas vrij dan hiervoor. Dat wijst erop dat er hieronder iets aan het veranderen is. Het zou kunnen dat dit na enkele jaren vanzelf weer overgaat. Maar het zou ook kunnen dat er magma naar boven komt. Dat weten we helaas niet zeker."
In de video hieronder komen onder andere bewoners uit het gebied aan het woord:
VIDEO BIJ BRON
Hoewel een uitbarsting onwaarschijnlijk is, is het dus toch nodig om erop voorbereid te zijn. Maar daar wringt de schoen. De regio heeft evacuatieplannen voor het geval er een aardbeving plaatsvindt, maar die zijn al jaren niet bijgewerkt of gebruikt voor oefeningen. Verschillende burgemeesters maakten in Italiaanse media gewag van vluchtwegen die te smal zijn of zelfs ontbreken.
Voor een eventuele vulkaanuitbarsting bestaat er voorlopig zelfs helemaal geen plan. En dat terwijl in de 'rode zone' op de Campi Flegrei een half miljoen mensen wonen.
De Italiaanse regering heeft daarom een wet aangenomen die stelt dat er binnen drie maanden een plan moet liggen en het liefst nog sneller. "We gaan proberen in 60 dagen te doen wat in de 60 jaar hiervoor nooit is gebeurd", zei minister Musumeci van Civiele Bescherming. Ook maakt de regering zo'n 50 miljoen euro vrij voor het aanleggen van nieuwe vluchtwegen en het extra controleren van gebouwen na grote aardschokken.
'Geen vluchtwegen'
Op het dorpsplein in Monte di Procida is inwoner Giuseppe Lalli er sceptisch over. "Ze zeggen dat we bij een evacuatie naar Molise moeten", zegt hij schouderophalend. Hoe hij in die regio aan de andere kant van het land komt, welke weg hij moet nemen en waar hij zich moet melden, zou hij niet weten. "Volgens mij zijn hier helemaal geen vluchtwegen."
Buurvrouw Mancino heeft meer vertrouwen in de overheid. "Als het zover is, zullen ze ons wel laten weten welke weg we moeten nemen. Het belangrijkst is dat je niet in paniek raakt, niet zomaar de auto neemt en zelf gaat rijden."
"Wij leren hier al van kleins af aan hoe we moeten samenleven met de vulkaan", vertelt ze. "Die kennis geven we weer door aan onze kinderen. Zo wonen mensen hier al duizenden jaren, met af en toe bevingen. Laten we hopen dat we hier nog duizenden jaren kunnen blijven wonen."
https://nos.nl/artikel/24(...)ijn-geen-vluchtwegen
Mwa, vooral een enorm smerige stad.quote:Op vrijdag 6 oktober 2023 17:12 schreef MissButterflyy het volgende:
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Klopt. Wel zonde als het zou gebeuren, het is echt een bijzondere en op veel plekken mooie stad.
Voor zolang als het duurt.quote:Op maandag 23 oktober 2023 14:13 schreef Jor_Dii het volgende:
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Mwa, vooral een enorm smerige stad.
quote:A 4.3 magnitude earthquake hit Campi Flegrei, just west of Naples, on 27 September. It was the region’s strongest shock in 40 years, and part of a seismic sequence that has been rattling Campi Flegrei for several weeks. The government has earmarked 52 million for risk assessment and prevention.
The seismic sequence is providing scientists with more data to study ground displacement at Campi Flegrei, a recurrent phenomenon called bradyseism. In the mid-1980s there was another period of ground uplift and intense seismic activity that eventually abated and led to a long period of ground subsidence. Then a new uplift started in 2003 and is ongoing. The ground at Campi Flegrei has risen by 1.15 metres since 2005. Activity has been intensifying for several months now, surpassing 1,000 earthquakes per month since last August.
Two hypotheses have been proposed to explain bradyseism. In the first one, the hydrothermal system, which lies between three and four kilometres below the surface, heats up because of magma intrusions from the reservoir, around 8 kilometres below. “We can think about the rocks in the crust as a sponge, whose pores are filled by hydrothermal fluids that can expand their volume”, explains Micol Todesco, volcanologist at the National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology (INGV) in Bologna. The volume increase would in turn lead to the observed soil uplift.
In the second hypothesis, a column of hot gases ascends from the deep magma and reaches the hydrothermal system, heating it up. “Today the scientific community substantially agrees that the current unrest is driven by the degassing of deep magmatic fluids”, says Giuseppe De Natale, volcanologist at the INGV who directed the Osservatorio Vesuviano between 2013 and 2016.
quote:Supervolcano 'megabeds' discovered at bottom of sea point to catastrophic events in Europe every 10,000 to 15,000 years
Four huge deposits from supervolcano eruptions over the last 40,000 years have been discovered at the bottom of the Mediterranean Sea.
Huge "megabeds" from ancient supervolcano eruptions are hiding at the bottom of the Mediterranean Sea, researchers have found. Their discovery points to a cycle of catastrophic events that appear to hit the region every 10,000 to 15,000 years.
Megabeds are huge submarine deposits that form in marine basins as a result of catastrophic events like volcanic eruptions.
The researchers found the beds while investigating deposits at the bottom of the Tyrrhenian Sea, near the coast of Italy, close to a large underwater volcano. Previous research into geohazards in the area using sediment cores and imaging indicated something was hidden beneath the ocean, but the resolution was not high enough to see the megabeds, lead study author Derek Sawyer, associate professor of Earth sciences at The Ohio State University, told Live Science.
In a new study published Aug. 10 in the journal Geology, Sawyer and colleagues went back to the site to create higher-resolution images of the layers of sediment and discovered a succession of four megabeds, each between 33 and 82 feet (10 to 25 meters) thick, and each separated by distinct layers of sediments. Cores drilled from the site showed the megabeds were made of volcanic material.
The oldest layer was around 40,000 years old, the next oldest was 32,000 years, the third 18,000 years, while the youngest formed about 8,000 years ago.
The team then looked at known volcanic activity in the region to determine the source of the megabeds. The region where the beds formed is extremely active volcanically and includes the Campi Flegrei supervolcano, which has been rumbling recently.
The oldest megabed formed after a huge eruption from Campi Flegrei 39,000 years ago — one of the biggest known eruptions on Earth. The same eruption may also have created the second bed, as the layer between the two is just 3.2 feet (1 m) — indicating a relatively short interval between the two events.
The scientists think the 18,000-year-old megabed formed in the wake of the Neapolitan Yellow Tuff supereruption of Campi Flegrei about 15,000 years ago, while the youngest megabed was deposited by another, less energetic eruption at Campi Flegrei.
The eruptions occurred roughly every 10,000 to 15,000 years. However, they are refining the eruption dates to get a more precise picture of the cycle and potential risk for the future. "It's not as constrained as we would like it to be," Sawyer said.
The findings, Sawyer said, will help researchers understand the risk posed by volcanoes in the region. "That whole field is still active, there's still a lot of concern about the future of that, so it's certainly potentially possible that it could happen again," he said.
quote:In the past 7 days, Campi Flegrei (Phlegrean Fields) volcano has had 59 quakes of magnitudes up to 3.7:
3 quakes above magnitude 3
12 quakes between magnitude 2 and 3
44 quakes below magnitude 2 that people normally don't feel.
quote:PHLEGREAN FIELDS - ZWERM UPDATE (27-04-2024 13:17)
Sinds 01:38 (lokale tijd) op 26-04-2024 is er een aardbevingszwerm aan de gang. Vandaag om 13.17 uur werden 51 aardbevingen met een magnitude Md ≥ 0,0 en een maximale magnitude Md = 3,9 0,3 gedetecteerd.
quote:Magnitude 3.9
Region SOUTHERN ITALY
Date time 2024-05-20 18:10:03.2 UTC
Location 40.753 ; 14.059
Depth 2 km
Distance 21 km SW of Naples, Italy / pop: 959,000 / local time: 20:10:03.2 2024-05-20
15 km SW of Fuorigrotta, Italy / pop: 76,500 / local time: 20:10:03.2 2024-05-20
Source parameters not yet reviewed by a seismologist
Opgeschaald naar een 4.4, zwaarste aardbeving in 40 jaarquote:
quote:CAMPI PHLEGREI - SCIAME PERSBERICHT n. 2 van 20/05/2024
Sinds 19.51 lokale tijd op 20-05-2024 is er een seismische zwerm onderweg op #CampiFlegrei .
Om 23.29 uur werden voorlopig 49 aardbevingen met een magnitude Md ≥ 0,0 en een maximale magnitude Md=4,40,3 gedetecteerd.
quote:New earthquake swarm in Campi Flegrei, Italy
An earthquake swarm began in the Campi Flegrei area of southern Italy at 07:58 LT (06:58 UTC) on January 13, 2025.
The Campi Flegrei volcanic area, located near Naples in southern Italy, experienced a seismic swarm starting at 06:58 UTC on January 13.
Italy’s National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology (INGV) reported the strongest event in the sequence having a magnitude of 1.2 0.3 with a total of 95 localized earthquakes recorded so far. The depths of earthquakes ranged between 0.2 km (0.1 miles) and 3.1 km (1.9 miles).
The main events included an earthquake at 12:31 UTC with a magnitude of 0.6 0.3 recorded at a depth of 2.9 km (1.8 miles). Another event at 07:04 UTC had a magnitude of 0.4 0.3 with a depth of 1.9 km (1.2 miles). At 07:03 UTC, an earthquake with a magnitude of 1.1 0.3 occurred at a depth of 0.4 km (0.2 miles).
The largest event was at 06:58 UTC with a magnitude of 1.2 0.3 at a depth of 2.1 km (1.3 miles). The nearest seismic station was just 0.5 km (0.3 miles) from the epicenter.
While such events are common in seismically active regions like Campi Flegrei, their shallow nature can lead to increased felt intensity, even at lower magnitudes.
The Campanian volcanoes, Vesuvius, Campi Flegrei, and the island of Ischia, represent the most monitored and studied volcanic areas in the world because of the risk associated with a possible resumption of volcanic activity.
The ongoing swarm adds to the long history of seismic activity in the Campi Flegrei which is a 13 km (8 miles) wide volcanic complex. It encompasses Naples and extends south into the Gulf of Pozzuoli.
quote:Regio rond supervulkaan nabij Napels opgeschrikt door aardbevingen
Het gebied rond de Zuid-Italiaanse grootstad Napels is opgeschrikt door verschillende aardbevingen. De zwaarste beving werd geregistreerd met een magnitude van 3,1 op de schaal van Richter, volgens het Nationaal Instituut voor Geofysica en Vulkanologie (INGV) .
Het epicentrum van de schok, die zich voordeed rond 9 uur ‘s ochtends lokale tijd, lag in de zogenaamde Flegresche Velden, een deel van de caldera van een supervulkaan. Voorlopig zijn er geen gewonden of grote schade gemeld. Uit voorzorg hebben meerdere scholen wel de lessen onderbroken.
De Campi Flegrei, of Flegresche Velden, is een gebied met frequente vulkanische activiteiten en wordt al een tijdje geteisterd door kleine en iets zwaardere aardbevingen. Onderzoekers roepen al langer op voor extra voorzichtigheid vanwege deze aardbevingen. In de regio geldt al meer dan tien jaar code geel.
De supervulkaan
Supervulkanen onderscheiden zich door hun bijzonder grote magmakamer en enorme kracht: ze barsten daadwerkelijk uit, in tegenstelling tot gewone vulkanen.
In mei 2024 werd het gebied getroffen door de zwaarste aardbevingen van de afgelopen veertig jaar. De krachtigste beving uit die reeks had een kracht van 4,4 op de schaal van Richter. Na die schokken nam de regering in Rome nieuwe maatregelen en er kondigde ook plannen aan voor een mogelijke evacuatie van het gebied.
quote:Earthquake swarm recorded in Campi Flegrei, Italy
An earthquake swarm began in the Campi Flegrei area of southern Italy at 08:03 LT (07:03 UTC) on February 5, 2025.
An earthquake swarm was detected at Campi Flegrei between 08:03 and 13:05 LT (07:03 and 12:05 UTC) on February 5, 2025. A total of 63 earthquakes were detected, with the highest magnitude event measured at 3.1 at a depth of 0.3 km (984 feet), according to the Italian National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology (INGV).
The earthquakes are concentrated within the Campi Flegrei, a large volcanic area west of Naples. The events vary in depth with the shallowest recorded at 0.1 km (328 feet) and the deepest reaching 4.4 km (2.7 miles).
The total number of localized earthquakes in the Campi Flegrei region for the year 2025 has now reached 449
The Campi Flegrei area has been experiencing increased seismic activity in recent years, with scientists closely monitoring potential geophysical changes. Further analysis will determine if the swarm is linked to ongoing subsurface magmatic processes or tectonic adjustments within the caldera.
The Campanian volcanoes, Vesuvius, Campi Flegrei, and the island of Ischia, represent the most monitored and studied volcanic areas in the world because of the risk associated with a possible resumption of volcanic activity.
The ongoing swarm adds to the long history of seismic activity in the Campi Flegrei which is a 13 km (8 miles) wide volcanic complex. It encompasses Naples and extends south into the Gulf of Pozzuoli.
The region’s geology is marked by extensive ground deformation, fumarolic activity, and seismicity because of the underlying magmatic and hydrothermal systems.
Campi Flegrei has experienced cycles of uplift and subsidence since Roman times. Its earliest known volcanic products date back approximately 47 000 years.
The caldera was formed after two major explosive eruptions, the Campanian Ignimbrite eruption about 36 000 years ago and the Neapolitan Yellow Tuff (NYT) eruption around 15 000 years ago, which ejected over 40 km3 (9.6 mi3) of material.
After the NYT eruption, numerous smaller eruptions occurred from scattered vents both on land and underwater. Most activity was concentrated in three periods: 15 000 – 9 500 years ago, 8 600 – 8 200 years ago, and 4 800 – 3 800 years ago.
The most recent eruptions were recorded in 1158 CE at Solfatara and in 1538 CE (VEI 3) when the Monte Nuovo cinder cone was formed.
En Sicily als ik je kaartje zo zie?quote:Op vrijdag 7 februari 2025 18:20 schreef Momo het volgende:
[ x ]
Toeval of niet, tegelijk activiteit op Santorini?
Ja dit is niet Campi Flegrei bij Napels, maar ook wel opvallende beving in Italiquote:Op vrijdag 7 februari 2025 18:24 schreef MissButterflyy het volgende:
[..]
En Sicily als ik je kaartje zo zie?
Ja dat hebben we hierquote:Op vrijdag 7 februari 2025 18:20 schreef Momo het volgende:
[ x ]
Toeval of niet, tegelijk activiteit op Santorini?
quote:Op dit moment is er nog een seismische zwerm gaande op #CampiFlegrei . De zwaarste schokgolf uit de reeks had een magnitude van 2,6 en was duidelijk voelbaar in het gebied van de Flegresche Velden. De laatste dagen is er weer sprake van bijzonder sterke seismische activiteit in de caldera.
quote:de schok die om 00:19 werd gevoeld, had een magnitude van 3,9 en vond plaats tussen Solfatara en Pisciarelli op een diepte van 2 km. Behalve in het Flegresche gebied was de schok ook sterk voelbaar in Napels, Ischia en aan de Domitiaanse kust.
quote:Andere schokken zijn nog gaande en moeten nog door de INGV worden geparametriseerd. Sinds vanmiddag zijn er meer dan 150 aardbevingen geregistreerd, waaronder twee met een kracht van 3,9: n om 15.30 uur in de Golf van Pozzuoli en n om 00.19 uur bij Solfatara.
quote:Over 200 earthquakes recorded during earthquake swarm in Campi Flegrei, Italy
An earthquake swarm began in the Campi Flegrei area of southern Italy at 16:53 LT (15:53 UTC) on February 15, 2025. The strongest in the series thus far was M3.9 on February 16.
A new earthquake swarm started at Campi Flegrei at 16:53 LT (15:53 UTC) on February 15. The area has recorded more than 203 earthquakes over the next 24 hours, with the strongest reaching M3.9 0.3 on February 16, according to the Italian National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology (INGV).
The earthquakes are concentrated in the caldera around Solfatara and Agnano.
The quakes are occurring at shallow depths between 0.2 km (0.12 miles) and 4.2 km (2.61 miles), a key characteristic of activity associated with ground deformation in Campi Flegrei.
Multiple earthquakes at varying depths were recorded on February 17, including M1.5 at 07:42 UTC, M2.7 at 07:14 UTC, M2.8 at 07:14:11 UTC, and M3.2 at 07:12 UTC.
The Campi Flegrei area has been experiencing increased seismic activity in recent years, with scientists closely monitoring potential geophysical changes. Further analysis will determine if the swarm is linked to ongoing subsurface magmatic processes or tectonic adjustments within the caldera.
The Campanian volcanoes, Vesuvius, Campi Flegrei, and the island of Ischia, represent the most monitored and studied volcanic areas in the world because of the risk associated with a possible resumption of volcanic activity.
The ongoing swarm adds to the long history of seismic activity in the Campi Flegrei, a 13 km (8 miles) wide volcanic complex encompassing Naples and extending south into the Gulf of Pozzuoli.
quote:Napels opnieuw getroffen door reeks lichte aardbevingen
Het gebied rond Napels, in het zuiden van Itali, is opgeschrikt door een reeks lichte aardbevingen. In de nacht van zondag op maandag had de krachtigste beving een magnitude van 3,9, zo meldt het Nationale Instituut voor
De zwaarste schok vond plaats rond 0.20 uur in de zogenaamde Flegresche Velden, een gebied met veel vulkanische activiteit enkele kilometers buiten het centrum van de stad. Het was de tweede beving met een magnitude van 3,9 die het gebied in minder dan 12 uur trof. In de afgelopen drie dagen werd het gebied minstens elf keer getroffen door bevingen met een kracht van 2 of hoger.
In eerste instantie waren er geen meldingen van schade of gewonden, maar scholen in de gemeente Pozzuoli zouden maandag uit voorzorg gesloten blijven, aldus burgemeester Gigi Manzoni volgens het Italiaanse persbureau Ansa. Ook in mei vorig jaar werd de regio tussen Napels en Pozzuoli getroffen door een tamelijk zware beving, met een kracht van 4,4, met het epicentrum in de Flegresche Velden.
De Campi Flegrei, of Flegresche Velden, is een gebied waar veel vulkanische activiteiten worden vastgesteld en dat sinds enige tijd wordt geteisterd door lichte maar ook iets zwaardere aardbevingen. Vanwege die aardbevingen roepen onderzoekers al langer op tot voorzichtigheid. In de regio geldt sinds meer dan tien jaar code geel.
quote:Over 550 earthquakes recorded at Campi Flegrei caldera, prompting school closures in Pozzuoli, Italy
An intense earthquake swarm is in progress in the Campi Flegrei volcanic caldera, southern Italy, since 15:53 UTC on February 15, 2025. More than 556 earthquakes with magnitudes up to M3.9 were registered by 13:00 UTC on February 18. As a precautionary measure, schools in the town of Pozzuoli, which is close to the epicenter of the earthquakes, are closed today.
An intense earthquake swarm started at Campi Flegrei volcanic caldera — also known as Phlegrean Fields — at 16:53 LT (15:53 UTC) on February 15, with the area recording more than 556 earthquakes by 13:00 UTC on February 18, according to data provided by the Italian National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology (INGV).
The two strongest earthquakes measured M3.9. The first occurred in the Gulf of Pozzuoli at 15:30 LT (14:30 UTC) on February 16, and the second near Pozzuoli at 00:19 LT on February 17 (23:19 UTC on February 16).
In response to the increasing seismicity, Pozzuoli Mayor Gigi Manzoni ordered the closure of schools on February 18 to allow municipal technicians to conduct structural safety inspections.
The country’s Civil Protection Department also deployed volunteer emergency responders and established temporary shelters for displaced residents in Pozzuoli, Bacoli, and Naples.
Nello Musumeci, Civil Protection Minister, has appointed a special commissioner to oversee risk-prevention measures and has raised concerns over urban development in this seismically active region.
Mag je wel hier in posten als je wilt.quote:Op vrijdag 21 februari 2025 01:50 schreef yessie234 het volgende:
De Etna is weer actief, een van de ondergrondse in de buurt van Stromboli. Bij NPO en VRT een berichtje over het vulkanisme toerisme, en hoe lokale hulpverleners met lede ogen aanzien dat deze mensen slecht gekleed de ronkende Etna van dichtbij bekijken. Ze kunnen de toeristen niet tegenhouden, blijkbaar omdat ze ervan uit gaan toch wel gered te zullen worden.
https://www.vrt.be/vrtnws(...)-sicilie-skien-lava/
Ander filmpje met interview op website nos.nieuws van vandaag.
quote:Earthquake swarm and ground uplift at Campi Flegrei, Italy
Over 600 earthquakes were recorded at Campi Flegrei, Italy, between February 17 and 23, 2025, with the largest measuring M3.2. Around 1 cm (0.4 inches) of ground uplift was observed in the area of maximum deformation, coinciding with the onset of an earthquake swarm on February 15.
Seismic monitoring stations near the Campi Flegrei caldera registered a preliminary total of 692 earthquakes in a swarm that started at 15:53 UTC on February 15 and ended at 23:53 UTC on February 19. Two more swarms of much lower intensity (less than 30 events) were registered over the next 3 days.
According to the latest weekly bulletin from the National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology (INGV), the strongest earthquake of this period reached M3.2, with most activity centered in the Solfatara-Pisciarelli sector.
Notably, between February 15 and 16, a localized uplift of about 1 cm (0.4 inches) was observed, coinciding with the onset of a seismic swarm. However, no significant uplift changes have been detected since February 16.
Since August 2024, the average uplift rate at the RITE GNSS station—located in the zone of greatest deformation—has been about 10 3 mm (0.4 0.12 inches) per month. INGV data indicate the total uplift at RITE has reached roughly 21 cm (8.3 inches) since January 2024.
Geochemical parameters did not show substantial variations during the reporting period of February 17 to 23. The temperature sensor near the Pisciarelli fumarole measured a weekly average of about 97C (206 F), aligning with previously observed trends in hydrothermal heating and gas emissions.
Een hoop mensen hebben buiten geslapenquote:Op donderdag 13 maart 2025 09:10 schreef MissButterflyy het volgende:
Vannacht weer een zwaardere aardbeving daar.
quote:
quote:Earthquake swarm prompts state of emergency for Campi Flegrei, Italy
A state of emergency was declared for Italy’s Campi Flegrei area on May 13, 2025, following an M4.4 earthquake within a swarm of earthquakes that produced 49 registered events. The swarm began at 12:06 LT on May 13 and ended during the morning hours of May 14, according to the INGV Vesuvian Observatory. The Campi Flegrei caldera is one of Europe’s most closely monitored volcanic areas due to its dense population and history of significant unrest.
A state of emergency was declared for the Campi Flegrei area in southern Italy on May 13, following an M4.4 earthquake and a series of related seismic events.
The decision was announced by Civil Protection Minister Nello Musumeci with the goal of expediting ongoing risk mitigation procedures in response to the area’s increased seismicity attributed to bradyseism
“The persistence of the seismic swarm, which in two months has recorded three shocks clearly felt by the population, suggests the need to proceed with the declaration of a state of national emergency in the Campi Flegrei area,” Musumeci said.
The M4.4 earthquake occurred at 10:07 UTC (12:07 LT) near Pozzuoli, part of the Campi Flegrei caldera west of Naples. A subsequent M3.5 earthquake followed at 10:22 UTC.
The seismic events prompted evacuations of schools and public buildings, suspension of regional train services, and activation of emergency coordination centers.
According to the National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology (INGV) Vesuvian Observatory, the seismic swarm began at 10:06 UTC on May 13 and consisted of 49 events with local magnitudes (Md) ranging from below 0.0 to a maximum of Md 4.4 0.3. All earthquakes were located within the Campi Flegrei area.
The swarm ended during the morning hours of Wednesday, May 14.
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