[Rockhounds] Why scientists are excited about Italy's volcanoes
Tim Fisher
nospam at orerockon.com
Fri Aug 9 12:16:28 PDT 2024
I wish we had anywhere close to that time to be near those historic and
geologic sites. We did he big 4, Herculaneum, Pompei, Etna, and happened to
find Stromboli fairly active. We had planned on the jeep tour or cable car
to the Etna summit, but it was also fairly active and the fumes had forced
everything to shut down that day. So we watched from the road up to the top,
It was still amazing getting that close to volcano.
Tim Fisher
nospam at orerockon.com
-----Original Message-----
From: Rockhounds <rockhounds-bounces at rockhounds.drizzle.com> On Behalf Of
pmodreski at aol.com
Sent: Friday, August 9, 2024 9:23 AM
To: Rockhounds at drizzle.com: A mailing list for rock and gem collectors
<rockhounds at rockhounds.drizzle.com>
Cc: Bonnie (Bee) Olson <northend38 at yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: [Rockhounds] Why scientists are excited about Italy's
volcanoes
And some of us are excited about the Italian volcanoes, because we were
just there, this May! A trip I'd been wanting to do and talking about doing
for many years, and finally just did, this may, with my friend Bonnie and
two longtime geologist friends from Germany. We finally started planning for
it seriously, last summer, and left for it on May 15, to meet Renata and
Winfried in Naples. We visited Vesuvius, Pompeii, Herculaneum, and Pozzuoli
and the Solfatara in the Phlegraean Fields caldera on the mainland; then
went by ferry to Sicily and the Aeolian Islands, where we visited Etna,
Stromboli, Lipari, and Vulcano, along with Palermo and Milazzo on Sicily. My
German friends returned home after all this, while Bonnie and I continued on
to visit Rome, Florence, Paris, Mont St-Michel, and Madrid. Oh, with a half
day in Iceland too, not able to go further than the airport, town, and
harbor of Keflavik. What a trip--lots of adventures! We were gone about 35
days altogether.
We were in Italy a month and a half before the big eruptions that took
place at Etna and Stromboli! Maybe a good thing (but, darn!), so at least
we didn't get caught in any eruption clouds. We did get to watch lava
splashing out of the summit vents on Stromboli, but Etna, just steaming &
smoking--it did blow at least one little smoke ring for us. And Vesuvius was
totally quiet.
Hi to Kreigh and to all the rockhounds!
Pete Modreski, Wheat Ridge, CO (guess I just don't write posts to
Rockhounds, very often any more)(And, just returned from most of the past
month in Michigan, both southern, and the U.P.--just in the western Michigan
iron country, did not make it to the copper country.)
On Friday, August 9, 2024 at 09:46:54 AM MDT, Kreigh Tomaszewski
<kreigh at gmail.com> wrote:
The top of the volcano exploded, sending a gigantic column of ash four or
five kilometres
<https://www.protezionecivile.gov.it/en/notizia/stromboli-update-volcanic-ac
tivity-and-civil-protection-response/>
(2.5-3
miles) into the sky. Mount Stromboli, off the north coast of Sicily, is one
of the most active volcanoes in the world. On 11 July, it produced a
paroxysm – a term in geology for a type of powerful eruption that interrupts
a period of milder volcanic activity. In the villages nestled around the
foot of the volcano, warning sirens blared.
The paroxysm occurred shortly after 2pm local time and news of the event
quickly began to spread online. Shortly after the explosion, two dozen or so
volcanologists around Europe were due to attend one of their regular
meetings. Chiara Maria Petrone, a volcano petrologist at the Natural History
Museum in the UK, joined the session online.
"We started the meeting just an hour after the paroxysm," she recalls. "It
was really exciting."
Immediately, the scientists began bringing each other up to speed. Some
shared real-time data from seismometers and other instruments. A few
attendees even happened to be on the island of Stromboli at the time,
according to Petrone, meaning they were able to describe what they were
seeing. "It was all just happening at that moment," says .
https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20240806-why-scientists-are-excited-abou
t-italys-volcanoes
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