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Thermally-assisted Magma Emplacement Explains Restless Calderas
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AbstractMany calderas show repeated unrest over centuries. Though probably induced by magma, this unique behaviour is not understood and its dynamics remains elusive. To better understand these restless calderas, we interpret deformation data and build thermal models of Campi Flegrei caldera, Italy. Campi Flegrei experienced at least 4 major unrest episodes in the last decades. Our results indicate that the inflation and deflation of magmatic sources at the same location explain most deformation, at least since the build-up of the last 1538 AD eruption. However, such a repeated magma emplacement requires a persistently hot crust. Our thermal models show that this repeated emplacement was assisted by the thermal anomaly created by magma that was intruded at shallow depth ~3 ka before the last eruption. This may explain the persistence of the magmatic sources promoting the restless behaviour of the Campi Flegrei caldera; moreover, it explains the crystallization, re-melting and mixing among compositionally distinct magmas recorded in young volcanic rocks. Our model of thermally-assisted unrest may have a wider applicability, possibly explaining also the dynamics of other restless calderas.
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Title: Thermally-assisted Magma Emplacement Explains Restless Calderas
Description:
AbstractMany calderas show repeated unrest over centuries.
Though probably induced by magma, this unique behaviour is not understood and its dynamics remains elusive.
To better understand these restless calderas, we interpret deformation data and build thermal models of Campi Flegrei caldera, Italy.
Campi Flegrei experienced at least 4 major unrest episodes in the last decades.
Our results indicate that the inflation and deflation of magmatic sources at the same location explain most deformation, at least since the build-up of the last 1538 AD eruption.
However, such a repeated magma emplacement requires a persistently hot crust.
Our thermal models show that this repeated emplacement was assisted by the thermal anomaly created by magma that was intruded at shallow depth ~3 ka before the last eruption.
This may explain the persistence of the magmatic sources promoting the restless behaviour of the Campi Flegrei caldera; moreover, it explains the crystallization, re-melting and mixing among compositionally distinct magmas recorded in young volcanic rocks.
Our model of thermally-assisted unrest may have a wider applicability, possibly explaining also the dynamics of other restless calderas.
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