Interplay of volcanotectonic, sedimentary, and regional tectonic processes at Mount Etna’s submerged south-eastern flank

Author(s):  
Morelia Urlaub ◽  
Alessandro Bonforte ◽  
Jacob Geersen ◽  
Felix Gross ◽  
Bruna Pandolpho

<p><span>Collapses of coastal and ocean island volcanoes can cause damaging tsunamis and thus pose ocean-wide hazards. To assess the collapse hazard of an unstable flank, a profound understanding of its structural setting and active deformation is essential. This knowledge is, however, often missing, especially for the remote and submerged offshore part of the edifice. Long before satellite-based techniques were available, observations of extensional structures in the summit region and transpressive to compressional structures farther downslope helped to constrain flank instability onshore at many volcanoes globally. Similar deformation structures are also expected offshore where they might be even better preserved due to the absence of anthropogenic influence, limited weathering and erosion. However, in the offshore realm structures related to flank instability are masked by and interact with other processes that act on underwater slopes, such as bottom currents, downslope sediment transport, and regional tectonics. Furthermore, the remote location of offshore flanks complicates geophysical, geomorphological, and geological investigations. Using (micro-) bathymetric and high-resolution seismic data we analyse the seascape forming processes at the Eastern Sicily continental slope at the foot of Mount Etna's unstable south-eastern flank. We untangle seafloor structures related to volcanotectonic, sedimentary, and regional tectonic processes. This allows singling out patterns and structures related to volcano flank instability, such as the lateral and outward boundaries of the unstable flank. We identify a strike-slip fault that changes its morphological appearance from a sharp linear feature atop a pressure ridge north of Catania Canyon to an almost smooth seafloor further downslope, where gravitational sediment transport outbeats volcanotectonic activity. Sediment transport from the continent to the abyss occurs along several canyons and channels that partly align with fault systems. Furthermore, uplift at the distant toe of Etna‘s south-eastern flank may indicate compression from the downwards moving flank, while at the same time provoking erosional responses, e.g. landslides. This new information provides important constraints for kinematic models that seek to explain the drivers of flank instability. It also forms the base for future studies that will infer the styles and rates of offshore flank deformation from the geological record. </span></p>

2007 ◽  
Vol 165 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 71-75 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna Brogna ◽  
Santo La Delfa ◽  
Viviana La Monaca ◽  
Salvatore Lo Nigro ◽  
Daniela Morelli ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 70 (2) ◽  
pp. 175-187
Author(s):  
Péter Pecsmány ◽  
András Hegedűs ◽  
János Vágó ◽  
Norbert Németh

The fracture deformations often result in linear morphological elements (lineaments, valleys) on the surface. In many cases, the direction of the lineaments and valleys can be well followed by the strike of the geological structural elements. Therefore, conclusions can be drawn from these directions for regional tectonic processes. Our work aimed to analyse the relationship between the valley and lineament network and the structural elements in the south-eastern part of Bükk Region. We prepared the theoretical drainage network map and lineament map of the area. The direction of the linear elements was examined separately on the eastern part of South-Eastern Bükk that is built up mainly by Mesozoic limestone and the eastern side of Bükkalja area covered by Neogene and Quaternary sediments. Structural geological surveys were also performed on seven sites to measure the strike of joint sets. These results were compared with the valleys’ direction in the 2 km wide area of the measurement sites. Based on our results, it can be stated that the development of the drainage network was influenced by the geological elements; however, there are local differences in the characteristics of the South-Eastern Bükk and Bükkalja. Our study confirmed that the study of linear morphological elements has great importance in the exploration of geological structural elements.


Author(s):  
K. R. Deeming ◽  
B. McGuire ◽  
P. Harrop

In this study, we present evidence for early Holocene climatic conditions providing circumstances favourable to major lateral collapse at Mount Etna, Sicily. The volcano’s most notable topographic feature is the Valle del Bove, a 5×8 km cliff-bounded amphitheatre excavated from the eastern flank of the volcano. Its origin due to prehistoric lateral collapse is corroborated by stürtzstrom deposits adjacent to the amphitheatre’s downslope outlet, but the age, nature and cause of amphitheatre excavation remain matters for debate. Cosmogenic 3 He exposure ages determined for eroded surfaces within an abandoned watershed flanking the Valle del Bove support channel abandonment ca 7.5 ka BP, as a consequence of its excavation in a catastrophic collapse event. Watershed development was largely dictated by pluvial conditions during the early Holocene, which are also implicated in slope failure. A viable trigger is magma emplacement into rift zones in the eastern flank of a water-saturated edifice, leading to the development of excess pore pressures, consequent reduction in sliding resistance, detachment and collapse. Such a mechanism is presented as one potential driver of future lateral collapse in volcanic landscapes forecast to experience increased precipitation or melting of ice cover as a consequence of anthropogenic warming.


Author(s):  
B.H. Морозов ◽  
B.H. Татаринов ◽  
И.Ю. Буров

The questions o f assessment and prédiction of potential charnels o f infiltration of radionuclides in géologie environment are discussed. This is specially important for underground allocation of the nuclear objects. The method of allows for spatial-temporal variations in a geological massif at ail hierarchical levels from régional tectonic processes up top peri-contour zones of chambers.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiashun Hu ◽  
Lijun Liu ◽  
Michael Gurnis

AbstractGrowth of the Andes has been attributed to Cenozoic subduction. Although climatic and tectonic processes have been proposed to be first-order mechanisms, their interaction and respective contributions remain largely unclear. Here, we apply three-dimensional, fully-dynamic subduction models to investigate the effect of trench-axial sediment transport and subduction on Andean growth, a mechanism that involves both climatic and tectonic processes. We find that the thickness of trench-fill sediments, a proxy of plate coupling (with less sediments causing stronger coupling), exerts an important influence on the pattern of crustal shortening along the Andes. The southward migrating Juan Fernandez Ridge acts as a barrier to the northward flowing trench sediments, thus expanding the zone of plate coupling southward through time. Consequently, the predicted history of Andean shortening is consistent with observations. Southward expanding crustal shortening matches the kinematic history of inferred compression. These results demonstrate the importance of climate-tectonic interaction on mountain building.


2001 ◽  
Vol 63 (8) ◽  
pp. 526-535 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sonia Calvari ◽  
Harry Pinkerton
Keyword(s):  

Science ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 346 (6205) ◽  
pp. 65-67 ◽  
Author(s):  
David T. Sandwell ◽  
R. Dietmar Müller ◽  
Walter H. F. Smith ◽  
Emmanuel Garcia ◽  
Richard Francis

Gravity models are powerful tools for mapping tectonic structures, especially in the deep ocean basins where the topography remains unmapped by ships or is buried by thick sediment. We combined new radar altimeter measurements from satellites CryoSat-2 and Jason-1 with existing data to construct a global marine gravity model that is two times more accurate than previous models. We found an extinct spreading ridge in the Gulf of Mexico, a major propagating rift in the South Atlantic Ocean, abyssal hill fabric on slow-spreading ridges, and thousands of previously uncharted seamounts. These discoveries allow us to understand regional tectonic processes and highlight the importance of satellite-derived gravity models as one of the primary tools for the investigation of remote ocean basins.


During the course of this Discussion Meeting, a very large amount of regional tectonic geology was displayed, and debated critically in a terrane framework, on scales ranging from the whole of the North American Precambrian or the Mesozoic-Cenozoic Tethys down to particular segments of the Caledonides and Alpides. A wide spectrum of opinion was expressed from those who believe that the terrane methodology is a critical and essential objective stage in data handling before any rational palaeogeographic and palaeotectonic synthesis can be attempted in plate boundary zones to those who believe that the terrane philosophy is fundamentally flawed, dangerous, and pernicious, in that it leads to random data collection and the obscuring of fundamental plate tectonic processes. Another view was that terranology has been useful in drawing our attention to the importance of large pre-collisional strike—slip or transform motions in orogenic belts and the juxtaposition of disparate elements and zones. Yet another position was that there is nothing new in terranology that is not implicitly and explicitly inherent in plate boundary processes and that terrane analysis is simply another harmless word for what most careful regional geological synthesizers have been doing since the early 1970s. Naturally, no coherent consensus view emerged from the discussion, but an important result was that a huge amount of excellent regional and global geology and tectonic ideas were discussed in the context of the problems and complexities of plate boundary zone evolution and the mechanisms by which objects from the size of ‘knockers’ to continents, detach, move and weld to form collages at all scales.


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