SlideShare una empresa de Scribd logo
1 de 4
ESE 11-Dr. Craig- Fall-2013
Name:__________________Date:________
Classroom Activity
In Monitoring Mt. Etna, scientists in Sicily are collecting data to monitor the magma moving inside
Mount Etna.
This feature story is an illustration of the process of science. It shows scientists collecting field data
that will help them predict how when the volcano will erupt. (Read more about The Scientific
Process.)
This Classroom Discussion Activity can be used to connect your students to the process of
science, highlight overarching scientific themes, and enhance comprehension of the story
Synopsis
Scientists in Sicily are collecting an enormous amount of data to monitor moving magma inside
Mount Etna, one of the most active volcanoes in the world. Nearly a million people live on the
volcano's flanks, so being able to predict an eruption could be a matter of life and death. In this Earth
Bulletin, visit the volcano's snowy slopes and learn how scientists from the Italian National Institute
for Geophysics and Volcanology record seismic activity, measure gases seeping up through the
ground, sense the volcano's temperature changes, and assess disturbances in gravitational and
magnetic fields to predict eruptions weeks ahead of time.
Article: Follow the Magma
In the last decade, Etna has been erupting about once a year.
AMNH
At dawn on March 11, 1669, a crack 2 meters wide and 9 kilometers long gaped open on the
southern flank of Mount Etna on the island of Sicily. Within a week, lava surged toward the stone
walls surrounding the coastal city of Catania. The eruption killed most of Catania's 20,000 residents
and destroyed much of the city, even filling the moat of its signature Ursino Castle with molten rock.
The 1669 event was arguably the fastest and largest lava flow ever documented for Etna, yet a
future eruption could easily surpass it. The volcano has erupted about once a year during the last
decade, and it releases not only molten flows but also spectacular explosions of lava that can
fountain hundreds of meters into the air. While most of Etna's eruptions occur far from the million-
plus people who now live on its flanks, a new fissure could open anywhere on its 40-kilometer-wide,
crater-scarred expanse, and lava could take a villageorCataniaagain.
Today, scientists watch Etna more thoroughly than any other volcano in Europe. Their datawhich
include seismic readings, gas measurements, thermal images, and morecan now warn of eruption
days, weeks, and months ahead, giving authorities ample time to detour air and ground traffic, alert
local communities, and prevent a catastrophic loss of life.
Thermal imaging reveals where Etna is warming under the surface.
AMNH
Warning Signs
"Until 15 or 20 years ago, volcanology was basically a science made of visual observations,"
explains Salvatore Giammanco, a geophysicist at the Catania branch of Italy's National Institute for
Geophysics and Volcanology, called INGV. "Today, by using technology, we can get an enormous
amount of information, and that helps us make computer models of the behavior of the volcano."
Together, the varied data give researchers a detailed picture of how the entire system is evolving in
time and space.
Giammanco and his colleagues comb the slopes of Mount Etna for indirect clues to future eruptions.
Like most volcanoes, Etna is located near the collision boundary of two tectonic plates-giant slabs of
Earth's crust and uppermost mantle, or lithosphere. As the African Plate sinks beneath the Eurasian
Plate, which underlies Etna, it releases extremely hot water, causing partial melting of the Eurasian
Plate's upper mantle. This melted rock can exude through fractures to the surface, creating a
volcanic eruption. The plate movement also produces lots of earthquakes. More than 75 seismic
stations planted at various altitudes on Etna and the eastern coast of Sicily help scientists sense
changes in the motion of the plates and reconstruct the movement of magma below. But detecting
these vibrations is just one part of the prediction technique.
One reason magma rises is that it contains dissolved gases. These gases can rapidly expand,
sometimes explosively, to force magma to the surface. The process is similar to opening a shaken
can of soda or champagne: dissolved carbon dioxide expands rapidly into bubbles when pressure is
released and then spurts out the opening. Before an eruption, the movement of the gases in the
magma produces seismic tremors. "A volcanic tremor is a continuous vibration," says INGV
seismologist Susanna Falsaperla. "A kind of breathing of the volcano itself." A change in the size of
the tremor signal on a seismometer signals that magma is movingperhaps even rising to the surface.
But volcanic gases can also be measured directly, because some gas seeps out of the four craters
at Etna's summit and the soil on its flanks. The more magma below, the more gas above. "The
summit typically releases between 2,000 and 3,000 tons of sulfur dioxide gas per day," says
Giammanco. "Before an eruption it can reach 20,000 tons per day." Etna's gas emissions are
monitored constantly. Six stationary sensors ring the summitthey are among the first deployed at any
volcanoand constantly document gas concentrations and radio the data to a control room in Catania.
To monitor gas emissions on the flanks, Giammanco and his colleagues must travel into fault zones
with portable sensors in cars, in briefcases, or even mounted on top of helmets.
The ratio of one gas to another in these emissions can indicate how soon the volcano may erupt.
Various gases require different amounts of pressure to remain dissolved in magma. As magma rises
toward the surface, the surrounding pressure drops, so gases with low solubility (such as carbon
dioxide and helium) come out first. Sulfur dioxide, hydrogen sulfide, and water vapor follow. At very
low pressures, gases such as chlorine and fluorine release.
Scientists can use gas indicators to track magma as it rises to the surface and predict when it might
break through. For example, when rising magma reaches about 15 to 20 kilometers below ground, it
releases mainly carbon dioxide and helium. When the magma comes within 3 or 4 kilometers of the
surface, it starts to release sulfur dioxide, hydrogen sulfide, and water vapor. As the magma
continues to ascend, it sheds chlorine, and then fluorine. Increases in carbon dioxide typically occur
six months to one month before eruption, while increases in sulfur dioxide precede eruptions by
several weeks to several days. "And when we observe increases in fluorine from the craters," says
Giammanco, "that means the magma is thereit's almost arrived at the surface."
Constant Monitoring
At 3,350 meters high, Etna dominates Sicily's temperate landscape with a peak that is white with
snow for most of the year. But magma rising underground can warm the volcano's surface rock.
Researchers make regular helicopter flights over Etna with infrared cameras that can see this heat,
while stationary cameras keep a constant watch on the summit. By indicating places where the
ground is heating up, thermal imaging can reveal the presence of hidden fractures through which
magma may be moving toward the surface.
Etna's volcanologists also collect many other kinds of data using a variety of instruments. GPS
devices allow them to notice ground deformationbulging, stretching, or twisting of the earth. They
also measure the length of existing fractures to note any changes. Among the more sophisticated
tools is Doppler radar, which is not yet widespread among volcano observatories. The radar
measures the velocity and quantity of ash and other material ejected during an eruption. Etna's
emissions can reach as far as Africa and Greece. "We can use these data to simulate the eruption
using computer models, and forecast dispersal of volcanic material in the atmosphere," explains
Mauro Coltelli, the head of INGV.
Scientists at INGV observe the wall of digital monitors that constantly relay Etna's vital signs.
AMNH
Much of the data collected on Etna are transmitted, in real time, to INGV's central control room in
Catania. There, a wall of digital data screens showing seismic, gas, thermal, and other indicators
keeps the pulse of this active system 24 hours a day, like the monitors of a patient in surgery.
The Limits of Prediction
Prediction of volcanic eruptions is not an exact science, yet a monitoring system as advanced as
Etna's can give authorities months, weeks, or hours of warning that an eruption may come. "Only
when we see chlorine and fluorine and when seismic activity begins can we tell the civil defense
'Okay, this is itan eruption will start in a matter of hours,'" says Giammanco. "It's more difficult to say
early on where the next eruption will occur. Location can only be identified some hours before it
begins."
The monitoring system allowed INGV scientists to successfully alert airports several hours preceding
Etna's most recent major eruption, which occurred in 2002 and 2003. Ash fell for two straight months
on Catania, forcing people to carry umbrellas and wear masks to protect their lungs. The scientists
also simulated the possible path of the lava flow, concluding that it would not endanger any towns.
Because of their predictions, unnecessary evacuations were avoided.
But volcanologists caution that it is impossible to predict every eruption. Sometimes, the system will
flag moving magma that doesn't erupt at allit invades the crust but never reaches the surface. And in
2004, there was a "silent eruption," a slow flow of lava from an old fissure without the typical warning
signs. "There was no change," notes Falsaperla. "That means that we must be aware of the
possibility that an eruption could start even in this silent mode." Loud or quiet, Etna's restlessness
shows no signs of flagging, and it needs constant technological vigilance so scientists can stay a
step ahead.

Más contenido relacionado

La actualidad más candente

The map of asteroids risks and defence
The map of asteroids risks and defenceThe map of asteroids risks and defence
The map of asteroids risks and defenceavturchin
 
Thermal structure and dynamics of saturn northern springtime disturbance
Thermal structure and dynamics of saturn northern springtime disturbanceThermal structure and dynamics of saturn northern springtime disturbance
Thermal structure and dynamics of saturn northern springtime disturbanceSérgio Sacani
 
Chapter 17 – meteorology
Chapter 17 – meteorologyChapter 17 – meteorology
Chapter 17 – meteorologyAnnie cox
 
EARTH QUACK AND ITS TYPES BRIEFLY EXPLAIN
EARTH QUACK AND ITS TYPES BRIEFLY EXPLAINEARTH QUACK AND ITS TYPES BRIEFLY EXPLAIN
EARTH QUACK AND ITS TYPES BRIEFLY EXPLAINHafiz JUNAID
 
Living in an Active Zone Revision
Living in an Active Zone Revision Living in an Active Zone Revision
Living in an Active Zone Revision HOPE4Families
 

La actualidad más candente (6)

The map of asteroids risks and defence
The map of asteroids risks and defenceThe map of asteroids risks and defence
The map of asteroids risks and defence
 
Thermal structure and dynamics of saturn northern springtime disturbance
Thermal structure and dynamics of saturn northern springtime disturbanceThermal structure and dynamics of saturn northern springtime disturbance
Thermal structure and dynamics of saturn northern springtime disturbance
 
Chapter 17 – meteorology
Chapter 17 – meteorologyChapter 17 – meteorology
Chapter 17 – meteorology
 
EARTH QUACK AND ITS TYPES BRIEFLY EXPLAIN
EARTH QUACK AND ITS TYPES BRIEFLY EXPLAINEARTH QUACK AND ITS TYPES BRIEFLY EXPLAIN
EARTH QUACK AND ITS TYPES BRIEFLY EXPLAIN
 
Living in an Active Zone Revision
Living in an Active Zone Revision Living in an Active Zone Revision
Living in an Active Zone Revision
 
G10 earthquakes
G10 earthquakesG10 earthquakes
G10 earthquakes
 

Destacado (19)

1240 fall 2012_syllabus
1240 fall 2012_syllabus1240 fall 2012_syllabus
1240 fall 2012_syllabus
 
Characteristics of sedimentary rocks
Characteristics of sedimentary rocksCharacteristics of sedimentary rocks
Characteristics of sedimentary rocks
 
Folder test bank is orgo chapter 5
Folder test bank is orgo chapter 5Folder test bank is orgo chapter 5
Folder test bank is orgo chapter 5
 
Aaaaaaaaaaaaaa rock exa maaaafelsic
Aaaaaaaaaaaaaa rock exa maaaafelsicAaaaaaaaaaaaaa rock exa maaaafelsic
Aaaaaaaaaaaaaa rock exa maaaafelsic
 
Eratosthenes grade for earth science
Eratosthenes grade for earth scienceEratosthenes grade for earth science
Eratosthenes grade for earth science
 
Z matrix mark 45 theory and paper version one annette ready
Z matrix mark 45 theory and paper version one annette readyZ matrix mark 45 theory and paper version one annette ready
Z matrix mark 45 theory and paper version one annette ready
 
New books
New booksNew books
New books
 
Tungsten unit cell
Tungsten unit cellTungsten unit cell
Tungsten unit cell
 
13 thermal-decomp-of-na hco3 (1)
13 thermal-decomp-of-na hco3 (1)13 thermal-decomp-of-na hco3 (1)
13 thermal-decomp-of-na hco3 (1)
 
Tourmaline excellent for sept 16 th
Tourmaline excellent for sept 16 thTourmaline excellent for sept 16 th
Tourmaline excellent for sept 16 th
 
Folder test bank is orgo chapter 4
Folder test bank is orgo chapter 4Folder test bank is orgo chapter 4
Folder test bank is orgo chapter 4
 
Chapter17
Chapter17Chapter17
Chapter17
 
Chapter5
Chapter5Chapter5
Chapter5
 
Op ch02 lecture_earth3
Op ch02 lecture_earth3Op ch02 lecture_earth3
Op ch02 lecture_earth3
 
Chapter 11
Chapter 11Chapter 11
Chapter 11
 
Blue asbestos
Blue asbestosBlue asbestos
Blue asbestos
 
Tb chapter12 cccccccccccccccccccccc
Tb chapter12 ccccccccccccccccccccccTb chapter12 cccccccccccccccccccccc
Tb chapter12 cccccccccccccccccccccc
 
Ch221lec
Ch221lecCh221lec
Ch221lec
 
Le chatelier equilibrium
Le chatelier equilibriumLe chatelier equilibrium
Le chatelier equilibrium
 

Similar a In monitoring mt. etna

04VolcanicRelief.ppt
04VolcanicRelief.ppt04VolcanicRelief.ppt
04VolcanicRelief.pptEnginAltan4
 
252 CHAPTER 8Geologic Time (232 chapter 7Fire.docx
252      CHAPTER 8Geologic Time (232      chapter 7Fire.docx252      CHAPTER 8Geologic Time (232      chapter 7Fire.docx
252 CHAPTER 8Geologic Time (232 chapter 7Fire.docxeugeniadean34240
 
Volcanoes and volcanic erruptions
Volcanoes and volcanic erruptionsVolcanoes and volcanic erruptions
Volcanoes and volcanic erruptionsTricia Suazo
 
Volcanoes by James Aquilina, 4.03
Volcanoes by James Aquilina, 4.03Volcanoes by James Aquilina, 4.03
Volcanoes by James Aquilina, 4.03geographystudents
 
Volcanic eruption and hazard.ppt
Volcanic eruption and hazard.pptVolcanic eruption and hazard.ppt
Volcanic eruption and hazard.pptssuser70e49a
 
Mount etna case study
Mount etna case studyMount etna case study
Mount etna case studytimmy4682
 
Nyiragongo crater - journey to the center of the world
Nyiragongo crater - journey to the center of the worldNyiragongo crater - journey to the center of the world
Nyiragongo crater - journey to the center of the worldViorica Munteanu
 
Mountain eruptioned welsy an explanation text
Mountain eruptioned welsy an explanation textMountain eruptioned welsy an explanation text
Mountain eruptioned welsy an explanation textsman 2 mataram
 
The causes of climate change
The causes of climate changeThe causes of climate change
The causes of climate changeWill Williams
 
Exceptional Icy Cold Waves that Swept Across Different Parts of the World dur...
Exceptional Icy Cold Waves that Swept Across Different Parts of the World dur...Exceptional Icy Cold Waves that Swept Across Different Parts of the World dur...
Exceptional Icy Cold Waves that Swept Across Different Parts of the World dur...ijtsrd
 
Paleoclimatic data
Paleoclimatic dataPaleoclimatic data
Paleoclimatic datapeterevolves
 
Active Volcanoes in Europe
Active Volcanoes in EuropeActive Volcanoes in Europe
Active Volcanoes in Europemoz4
 
Biological effects of natural explosions
Biological effects of natural explosions Biological effects of natural explosions
Biological effects of natural explosions kbrunson
 
Enceladus Research Paper
Enceladus Research PaperEnceladus Research Paper
Enceladus Research PaperAlexis Naranjo
 
HOW TO AVOID THE EXTINCTION OF HUMANITY FROM THREATS CAUSED BY PLANET EARTH A...
HOW TO AVOID THE EXTINCTION OF HUMANITY FROM THREATS CAUSED BY PLANET EARTH A...HOW TO AVOID THE EXTINCTION OF HUMANITY FROM THREATS CAUSED BY PLANET EARTH A...
HOW TO AVOID THE EXTINCTION OF HUMANITY FROM THREATS CAUSED BY PLANET EARTH A...Faga1939
 
sulfur_signals_in_antarct-UCSD news
sulfur_signals_in_antarct-UCSD newssulfur_signals_in_antarct-UCSD news
sulfur_signals_in_antarct-UCSD newsRobina Shaheen
 
Plate Tectonics, Earthquake & Volcano
Plate Tectonics, Earthquake & VolcanoPlate Tectonics, Earthquake & Volcano
Plate Tectonics, Earthquake & VolcanoMalia Damit
 

Similar a In monitoring mt. etna (20)

04VolcanicRelief.ppt
04VolcanicRelief.ppt04VolcanicRelief.ppt
04VolcanicRelief.ppt
 
252 CHAPTER 8Geologic Time (232 chapter 7Fire.docx
252      CHAPTER 8Geologic Time (232      chapter 7Fire.docx252      CHAPTER 8Geologic Time (232      chapter 7Fire.docx
252 CHAPTER 8Geologic Time (232 chapter 7Fire.docx
 
Volcanoes and volcanic erruptions
Volcanoes and volcanic erruptionsVolcanoes and volcanic erruptions
Volcanoes and volcanic erruptions
 
Volcanoes by James Aquilina, 4.03
Volcanoes by James Aquilina, 4.03Volcanoes by James Aquilina, 4.03
Volcanoes by James Aquilina, 4.03
 
Volcanic eruption and hazard.ppt
Volcanic eruption and hazard.pptVolcanic eruption and hazard.ppt
Volcanic eruption and hazard.ppt
 
Mount etna case study
Mount etna case studyMount etna case study
Mount etna case study
 
Nyiragongo crater - journey to the center of the world
Nyiragongo crater - journey to the center of the worldNyiragongo crater - journey to the center of the world
Nyiragongo crater - journey to the center of the world
 
Mountain eruptioned welsy an explanation text
Mountain eruptioned welsy an explanation textMountain eruptioned welsy an explanation text
Mountain eruptioned welsy an explanation text
 
The causes of climate change
The causes of climate changeThe causes of climate change
The causes of climate change
 
Mt. ETNA - EXPLORING FRONTIERS of NATURE - EARTH EXPEDITIONS
Mt. ETNA - EXPLORING FRONTIERS of NATURE - EARTH EXPEDITIONS Mt. ETNA - EXPLORING FRONTIERS of NATURE - EARTH EXPEDITIONS
Mt. ETNA - EXPLORING FRONTIERS of NATURE - EARTH EXPEDITIONS
 
Exceptional Icy Cold Waves that Swept Across Different Parts of the World dur...
Exceptional Icy Cold Waves that Swept Across Different Parts of the World dur...Exceptional Icy Cold Waves that Swept Across Different Parts of the World dur...
Exceptional Icy Cold Waves that Swept Across Different Parts of the World dur...
 
Assignment #2
Assignment #2Assignment #2
Assignment #2
 
Paleoclimatic data
Paleoclimatic dataPaleoclimatic data
Paleoclimatic data
 
3
33
3
 
Active Volcanoes in Europe
Active Volcanoes in EuropeActive Volcanoes in Europe
Active Volcanoes in Europe
 
Biological effects of natural explosions
Biological effects of natural explosions Biological effects of natural explosions
Biological effects of natural explosions
 
Enceladus Research Paper
Enceladus Research PaperEnceladus Research Paper
Enceladus Research Paper
 
HOW TO AVOID THE EXTINCTION OF HUMANITY FROM THREATS CAUSED BY PLANET EARTH A...
HOW TO AVOID THE EXTINCTION OF HUMANITY FROM THREATS CAUSED BY PLANET EARTH A...HOW TO AVOID THE EXTINCTION OF HUMANITY FROM THREATS CAUSED BY PLANET EARTH A...
HOW TO AVOID THE EXTINCTION OF HUMANITY FROM THREATS CAUSED BY PLANET EARTH A...
 
sulfur_signals_in_antarct-UCSD news
sulfur_signals_in_antarct-UCSD newssulfur_signals_in_antarct-UCSD news
sulfur_signals_in_antarct-UCSD news
 
Plate Tectonics, Earthquake & Volcano
Plate Tectonics, Earthquake & VolcanoPlate Tectonics, Earthquake & Volcano
Plate Tectonics, Earthquake & Volcano
 

Más de Dr Robert Craig PhD

Hofstra Living environment Dr Rob
Hofstra Living environment Dr RobHofstra Living environment Dr Rob
Hofstra Living environment Dr RobDr Robert Craig PhD
 
Chapter 2-Your text book ves 5.pptx
Chapter 2-Your text book ves 5.pptxChapter 2-Your text book ves 5.pptx
Chapter 2-Your text book ves 5.pptxDr Robert Craig PhD
 
Brown dwarfs and planets jaslyn.pdf
Brown dwarfs and planets jaslyn.pdfBrown dwarfs and planets jaslyn.pdf
Brown dwarfs and planets jaslyn.pdfDr Robert Craig PhD
 
Day 1 Martin file from syllabus ves 5.pptx
Day 1 Martin file from syllabus ves 5.pptxDay 1 Martin file from syllabus ves 5.pptx
Day 1 Martin file from syllabus ves 5.pptxDr Robert Craig PhD
 
Astronomy chapter 1 power point.pptx
Astronomy chapter 1 power point.pptxAstronomy chapter 1 power point.pptx
Astronomy chapter 1 power point.pptxDr Robert Craig PhD
 
5Page43 how to classify stars parkslope heard from Annie.pdf
5Page43 how to classify stars parkslope  heard from Annie.pdf5Page43 how to classify stars parkslope  heard from Annie.pdf
5Page43 how to classify stars parkslope heard from Annie.pdfDr Robert Craig PhD
 
1-D Kinematics AP Lab Graphing.docx
1-D Kinematics AP Lab Graphing.docx1-D Kinematics AP Lab Graphing.docx
1-D Kinematics AP Lab Graphing.docxDr Robert Craig PhD
 
03 - Average Rates of Changec Cameron 1 Sara Hill.pdf
03 - Average Rates of Changec Cameron 1 Sara Hill.pdf03 - Average Rates of Changec Cameron 1 Sara Hill.pdf
03 - Average Rates of Changec Cameron 1 Sara Hill.pdfDr Robert Craig PhD
 
5.4- Measuring the Earth with Eratosthenes. Ves 2.pdf
5.4- Measuring the Earth with Eratosthenes. Ves 2.pdf5.4- Measuring the Earth with Eratosthenes. Ves 2.pdf
5.4- Measuring the Earth with Eratosthenes. Ves 2.pdfDr Robert Craig PhD
 
chapter 2 redone parkslope ves 4.pdf
chapter 2 redone parkslope ves 4.pdfchapter 2 redone parkslope ves 4.pdf
chapter 2 redone parkslope ves 4.pdfDr Robert Craig PhD
 
season_path_of_the_sun_and_latitude.pdf
season_path_of_the_sun_and_latitude.pdfseason_path_of_the_sun_and_latitude.pdf
season_path_of_the_sun_and_latitude.pdfDr Robert Craig PhD
 

Más de Dr Robert Craig PhD (20)

Hofstra Living environment Dr Rob
Hofstra Living environment Dr RobHofstra Living environment Dr Rob
Hofstra Living environment Dr Rob
 
pdf (4) 4.pdf
pdf (4) 4.pdfpdf (4) 4.pdf
pdf (4) 4.pdf
 
Mastering_Assignments.pdf.pdf
Mastering_Assignments.pdf.pdfMastering_Assignments.pdf.pdf
Mastering_Assignments.pdf.pdf
 
Lecture3.pdf
Lecture3.pdfLecture3.pdf
Lecture3.pdf
 
Lecture2.pdf
Lecture2.pdfLecture2.pdf
Lecture2.pdf
 
Lecture0.pdf
Lecture0.pdfLecture0.pdf
Lecture0.pdf
 
lecture 11 of 12 ves 1.pptx
lecture 11 of 12 ves 1.pptxlecture 11 of 12 ves 1.pptx
lecture 11 of 12 ves 1.pptx
 
Chapter 2-Your text book ves 5.pptx
Chapter 2-Your text book ves 5.pptxChapter 2-Your text book ves 5.pptx
Chapter 2-Your text book ves 5.pptx
 
Brown dwarfs and planets jaslyn.pdf
Brown dwarfs and planets jaslyn.pdfBrown dwarfs and planets jaslyn.pdf
Brown dwarfs and planets jaslyn.pdf
 
Day 1 Martin file from syllabus ves 5.pptx
Day 1 Martin file from syllabus ves 5.pptxDay 1 Martin file from syllabus ves 5.pptx
Day 1 Martin file from syllabus ves 5.pptx
 
Astronomy chapter 1 power point.pptx
Astronomy chapter 1 power point.pptxAstronomy chapter 1 power point.pptx
Astronomy chapter 1 power point.pptx
 
5Page43 how to classify stars parkslope heard from Annie.pdf
5Page43 how to classify stars parkslope  heard from Annie.pdf5Page43 how to classify stars parkslope  heard from Annie.pdf
5Page43 how to classify stars parkslope heard from Annie.pdf
 
1-D Kinematics AP Lab Graphing.docx
1-D Kinematics AP Lab Graphing.docx1-D Kinematics AP Lab Graphing.docx
1-D Kinematics AP Lab Graphing.docx
 
03 - Average Rates of Changec Cameron 1 Sara Hill.pdf
03 - Average Rates of Changec Cameron 1 Sara Hill.pdf03 - Average Rates of Changec Cameron 1 Sara Hill.pdf
03 - Average Rates of Changec Cameron 1 Sara Hill.pdf
 
5.4- Measuring the Earth with Eratosthenes. Ves 2.pdf
5.4- Measuring the Earth with Eratosthenes. Ves 2.pdf5.4- Measuring the Earth with Eratosthenes. Ves 2.pdf
5.4- Measuring the Earth with Eratosthenes. Ves 2.pdf
 
4.6- The Wanderers ves 7.pptx
4.6- The Wanderers ves 7.pptx4.6- The Wanderers ves 7.pptx
4.6- The Wanderers ves 7.pptx
 
Physics chapter 1.docx
Physics chapter 1.docxPhysics chapter 1.docx
Physics chapter 1.docx
 
chapter 2 redone parkslope ves 4.pdf
chapter 2 redone parkslope ves 4.pdfchapter 2 redone parkslope ves 4.pdf
chapter 2 redone parkslope ves 4.pdf
 
4.6- The Wanderers ves 7.pptx
4.6- The Wanderers ves 7.pptx4.6- The Wanderers ves 7.pptx
4.6- The Wanderers ves 7.pptx
 
season_path_of_the_sun_and_latitude.pdf
season_path_of_the_sun_and_latitude.pdfseason_path_of_the_sun_and_latitude.pdf
season_path_of_the_sun_and_latitude.pdf
 

Último

Transcript: New from BookNet Canada for 2024: BNC CataList - Tech Forum 2024
Transcript: New from BookNet Canada for 2024: BNC CataList - Tech Forum 2024Transcript: New from BookNet Canada for 2024: BNC CataList - Tech Forum 2024
Transcript: New from BookNet Canada for 2024: BNC CataList - Tech Forum 2024BookNet Canada
 
What is DBT - The Ultimate Data Build Tool.pdf
What is DBT - The Ultimate Data Build Tool.pdfWhat is DBT - The Ultimate Data Build Tool.pdf
What is DBT - The Ultimate Data Build Tool.pdfMounikaPolabathina
 
Are Multi-Cloud and Serverless Good or Bad?
Are Multi-Cloud and Serverless Good or Bad?Are Multi-Cloud and Serverless Good or Bad?
Are Multi-Cloud and Serverless Good or Bad?Mattias Andersson
 
"ML in Production",Oleksandr Bagan
"ML in Production",Oleksandr Bagan"ML in Production",Oleksandr Bagan
"ML in Production",Oleksandr BaganFwdays
 
What's New in Teams Calling, Meetings and Devices March 2024
What's New in Teams Calling, Meetings and Devices March 2024What's New in Teams Calling, Meetings and Devices March 2024
What's New in Teams Calling, Meetings and Devices March 2024Stephanie Beckett
 
Nell’iperspazio con Rocket: il Framework Web di Rust!
Nell’iperspazio con Rocket: il Framework Web di Rust!Nell’iperspazio con Rocket: il Framework Web di Rust!
Nell’iperspazio con Rocket: il Framework Web di Rust!Commit University
 
Passkey Providers and Enabling Portability: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptx
Passkey Providers and Enabling Portability: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptxPasskey Providers and Enabling Portability: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptx
Passkey Providers and Enabling Portability: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptxLoriGlavin3
 
New from BookNet Canada for 2024: Loan Stars - Tech Forum 2024
New from BookNet Canada for 2024: Loan Stars - Tech Forum 2024New from BookNet Canada for 2024: Loan Stars - Tech Forum 2024
New from BookNet Canada for 2024: Loan Stars - Tech Forum 2024BookNet Canada
 
"Debugging python applications inside k8s environment", Andrii Soldatenko
"Debugging python applications inside k8s environment", Andrii Soldatenko"Debugging python applications inside k8s environment", Andrii Soldatenko
"Debugging python applications inside k8s environment", Andrii SoldatenkoFwdays
 
Moving Beyond Passwords: FIDO Paris Seminar.pdf
Moving Beyond Passwords: FIDO Paris Seminar.pdfMoving Beyond Passwords: FIDO Paris Seminar.pdf
Moving Beyond Passwords: FIDO Paris Seminar.pdfLoriGlavin3
 
Connect Wave/ connectwave Pitch Deck Presentation
Connect Wave/ connectwave Pitch Deck PresentationConnect Wave/ connectwave Pitch Deck Presentation
Connect Wave/ connectwave Pitch Deck PresentationSlibray Presentation
 
How to write a Business Continuity Plan
How to write a Business Continuity PlanHow to write a Business Continuity Plan
How to write a Business Continuity PlanDatabarracks
 
SIP trunking in Janus @ Kamailio World 2024
SIP trunking in Janus @ Kamailio World 2024SIP trunking in Janus @ Kamailio World 2024
SIP trunking in Janus @ Kamailio World 2024Lorenzo Miniero
 
Advanced Computer Architecture – An Introduction
Advanced Computer Architecture – An IntroductionAdvanced Computer Architecture – An Introduction
Advanced Computer Architecture – An IntroductionDilum Bandara
 
unit 4 immunoblotting technique complete.pptx
unit 4 immunoblotting technique complete.pptxunit 4 immunoblotting technique complete.pptx
unit 4 immunoblotting technique complete.pptxBkGupta21
 
Hyperautomation and AI/ML: A Strategy for Digital Transformation Success.pdf
Hyperautomation and AI/ML: A Strategy for Digital Transformation Success.pdfHyperautomation and AI/ML: A Strategy for Digital Transformation Success.pdf
Hyperautomation and AI/ML: A Strategy for Digital Transformation Success.pdfPrecisely
 
Tampa BSides - Chef's Tour of Microsoft Security Adoption Framework (SAF)
Tampa BSides - Chef's Tour of Microsoft Security Adoption Framework (SAF)Tampa BSides - Chef's Tour of Microsoft Security Adoption Framework (SAF)
Tampa BSides - Chef's Tour of Microsoft Security Adoption Framework (SAF)Mark Simos
 
From Family Reminiscence to Scholarly Archive .
From Family Reminiscence to Scholarly Archive .From Family Reminiscence to Scholarly Archive .
From Family Reminiscence to Scholarly Archive .Alan Dix
 
TeamStation AI System Report LATAM IT Salaries 2024
TeamStation AI System Report LATAM IT Salaries 2024TeamStation AI System Report LATAM IT Salaries 2024
TeamStation AI System Report LATAM IT Salaries 2024Lonnie McRorey
 

Último (20)

Transcript: New from BookNet Canada for 2024: BNC CataList - Tech Forum 2024
Transcript: New from BookNet Canada for 2024: BNC CataList - Tech Forum 2024Transcript: New from BookNet Canada for 2024: BNC CataList - Tech Forum 2024
Transcript: New from BookNet Canada for 2024: BNC CataList - Tech Forum 2024
 
What is DBT - The Ultimate Data Build Tool.pdf
What is DBT - The Ultimate Data Build Tool.pdfWhat is DBT - The Ultimate Data Build Tool.pdf
What is DBT - The Ultimate Data Build Tool.pdf
 
Are Multi-Cloud and Serverless Good or Bad?
Are Multi-Cloud and Serverless Good or Bad?Are Multi-Cloud and Serverless Good or Bad?
Are Multi-Cloud and Serverless Good or Bad?
 
"ML in Production",Oleksandr Bagan
"ML in Production",Oleksandr Bagan"ML in Production",Oleksandr Bagan
"ML in Production",Oleksandr Bagan
 
What's New in Teams Calling, Meetings and Devices March 2024
What's New in Teams Calling, Meetings and Devices March 2024What's New in Teams Calling, Meetings and Devices March 2024
What's New in Teams Calling, Meetings and Devices March 2024
 
Nell’iperspazio con Rocket: il Framework Web di Rust!
Nell’iperspazio con Rocket: il Framework Web di Rust!Nell’iperspazio con Rocket: il Framework Web di Rust!
Nell’iperspazio con Rocket: il Framework Web di Rust!
 
DMCC Future of Trade Web3 - Special Edition
DMCC Future of Trade Web3 - Special EditionDMCC Future of Trade Web3 - Special Edition
DMCC Future of Trade Web3 - Special Edition
 
Passkey Providers and Enabling Portability: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptx
Passkey Providers and Enabling Portability: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptxPasskey Providers and Enabling Portability: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptx
Passkey Providers and Enabling Portability: FIDO Paris Seminar.pptx
 
New from BookNet Canada for 2024: Loan Stars - Tech Forum 2024
New from BookNet Canada for 2024: Loan Stars - Tech Forum 2024New from BookNet Canada for 2024: Loan Stars - Tech Forum 2024
New from BookNet Canada for 2024: Loan Stars - Tech Forum 2024
 
"Debugging python applications inside k8s environment", Andrii Soldatenko
"Debugging python applications inside k8s environment", Andrii Soldatenko"Debugging python applications inside k8s environment", Andrii Soldatenko
"Debugging python applications inside k8s environment", Andrii Soldatenko
 
Moving Beyond Passwords: FIDO Paris Seminar.pdf
Moving Beyond Passwords: FIDO Paris Seminar.pdfMoving Beyond Passwords: FIDO Paris Seminar.pdf
Moving Beyond Passwords: FIDO Paris Seminar.pdf
 
Connect Wave/ connectwave Pitch Deck Presentation
Connect Wave/ connectwave Pitch Deck PresentationConnect Wave/ connectwave Pitch Deck Presentation
Connect Wave/ connectwave Pitch Deck Presentation
 
How to write a Business Continuity Plan
How to write a Business Continuity PlanHow to write a Business Continuity Plan
How to write a Business Continuity Plan
 
SIP trunking in Janus @ Kamailio World 2024
SIP trunking in Janus @ Kamailio World 2024SIP trunking in Janus @ Kamailio World 2024
SIP trunking in Janus @ Kamailio World 2024
 
Advanced Computer Architecture – An Introduction
Advanced Computer Architecture – An IntroductionAdvanced Computer Architecture – An Introduction
Advanced Computer Architecture – An Introduction
 
unit 4 immunoblotting technique complete.pptx
unit 4 immunoblotting technique complete.pptxunit 4 immunoblotting technique complete.pptx
unit 4 immunoblotting technique complete.pptx
 
Hyperautomation and AI/ML: A Strategy for Digital Transformation Success.pdf
Hyperautomation and AI/ML: A Strategy for Digital Transformation Success.pdfHyperautomation and AI/ML: A Strategy for Digital Transformation Success.pdf
Hyperautomation and AI/ML: A Strategy for Digital Transformation Success.pdf
 
Tampa BSides - Chef's Tour of Microsoft Security Adoption Framework (SAF)
Tampa BSides - Chef's Tour of Microsoft Security Adoption Framework (SAF)Tampa BSides - Chef's Tour of Microsoft Security Adoption Framework (SAF)
Tampa BSides - Chef's Tour of Microsoft Security Adoption Framework (SAF)
 
From Family Reminiscence to Scholarly Archive .
From Family Reminiscence to Scholarly Archive .From Family Reminiscence to Scholarly Archive .
From Family Reminiscence to Scholarly Archive .
 
TeamStation AI System Report LATAM IT Salaries 2024
TeamStation AI System Report LATAM IT Salaries 2024TeamStation AI System Report LATAM IT Salaries 2024
TeamStation AI System Report LATAM IT Salaries 2024
 

In monitoring mt. etna

  • 1. ESE 11-Dr. Craig- Fall-2013 Name:__________________Date:________ Classroom Activity In Monitoring Mt. Etna, scientists in Sicily are collecting data to monitor the magma moving inside Mount Etna. This feature story is an illustration of the process of science. It shows scientists collecting field data that will help them predict how when the volcano will erupt. (Read more about The Scientific Process.) This Classroom Discussion Activity can be used to connect your students to the process of science, highlight overarching scientific themes, and enhance comprehension of the story Synopsis Scientists in Sicily are collecting an enormous amount of data to monitor moving magma inside Mount Etna, one of the most active volcanoes in the world. Nearly a million people live on the volcano's flanks, so being able to predict an eruption could be a matter of life and death. In this Earth Bulletin, visit the volcano's snowy slopes and learn how scientists from the Italian National Institute for Geophysics and Volcanology record seismic activity, measure gases seeping up through the ground, sense the volcano's temperature changes, and assess disturbances in gravitational and magnetic fields to predict eruptions weeks ahead of time. Article: Follow the Magma In the last decade, Etna has been erupting about once a year. AMNH At dawn on March 11, 1669, a crack 2 meters wide and 9 kilometers long gaped open on the southern flank of Mount Etna on the island of Sicily. Within a week, lava surged toward the stone walls surrounding the coastal city of Catania. The eruption killed most of Catania's 20,000 residents and destroyed much of the city, even filling the moat of its signature Ursino Castle with molten rock. The 1669 event was arguably the fastest and largest lava flow ever documented for Etna, yet a future eruption could easily surpass it. The volcano has erupted about once a year during the last decade, and it releases not only molten flows but also spectacular explosions of lava that can
  • 2. fountain hundreds of meters into the air. While most of Etna's eruptions occur far from the million- plus people who now live on its flanks, a new fissure could open anywhere on its 40-kilometer-wide, crater-scarred expanse, and lava could take a villageorCataniaagain. Today, scientists watch Etna more thoroughly than any other volcano in Europe. Their datawhich include seismic readings, gas measurements, thermal images, and morecan now warn of eruption days, weeks, and months ahead, giving authorities ample time to detour air and ground traffic, alert local communities, and prevent a catastrophic loss of life. Thermal imaging reveals where Etna is warming under the surface. AMNH Warning Signs "Until 15 or 20 years ago, volcanology was basically a science made of visual observations," explains Salvatore Giammanco, a geophysicist at the Catania branch of Italy's National Institute for Geophysics and Volcanology, called INGV. "Today, by using technology, we can get an enormous amount of information, and that helps us make computer models of the behavior of the volcano." Together, the varied data give researchers a detailed picture of how the entire system is evolving in time and space. Giammanco and his colleagues comb the slopes of Mount Etna for indirect clues to future eruptions. Like most volcanoes, Etna is located near the collision boundary of two tectonic plates-giant slabs of Earth's crust and uppermost mantle, or lithosphere. As the African Plate sinks beneath the Eurasian Plate, which underlies Etna, it releases extremely hot water, causing partial melting of the Eurasian Plate's upper mantle. This melted rock can exude through fractures to the surface, creating a volcanic eruption. The plate movement also produces lots of earthquakes. More than 75 seismic stations planted at various altitudes on Etna and the eastern coast of Sicily help scientists sense changes in the motion of the plates and reconstruct the movement of magma below. But detecting these vibrations is just one part of the prediction technique. One reason magma rises is that it contains dissolved gases. These gases can rapidly expand, sometimes explosively, to force magma to the surface. The process is similar to opening a shaken can of soda or champagne: dissolved carbon dioxide expands rapidly into bubbles when pressure is released and then spurts out the opening. Before an eruption, the movement of the gases in the magma produces seismic tremors. "A volcanic tremor is a continuous vibration," says INGV seismologist Susanna Falsaperla. "A kind of breathing of the volcano itself." A change in the size of the tremor signal on a seismometer signals that magma is movingperhaps even rising to the surface. But volcanic gases can also be measured directly, because some gas seeps out of the four craters at Etna's summit and the soil on its flanks. The more magma below, the more gas above. "The summit typically releases between 2,000 and 3,000 tons of sulfur dioxide gas per day," says
  • 3. Giammanco. "Before an eruption it can reach 20,000 tons per day." Etna's gas emissions are monitored constantly. Six stationary sensors ring the summitthey are among the first deployed at any volcanoand constantly document gas concentrations and radio the data to a control room in Catania. To monitor gas emissions on the flanks, Giammanco and his colleagues must travel into fault zones with portable sensors in cars, in briefcases, or even mounted on top of helmets. The ratio of one gas to another in these emissions can indicate how soon the volcano may erupt. Various gases require different amounts of pressure to remain dissolved in magma. As magma rises toward the surface, the surrounding pressure drops, so gases with low solubility (such as carbon dioxide and helium) come out first. Sulfur dioxide, hydrogen sulfide, and water vapor follow. At very low pressures, gases such as chlorine and fluorine release. Scientists can use gas indicators to track magma as it rises to the surface and predict when it might break through. For example, when rising magma reaches about 15 to 20 kilometers below ground, it releases mainly carbon dioxide and helium. When the magma comes within 3 or 4 kilometers of the surface, it starts to release sulfur dioxide, hydrogen sulfide, and water vapor. As the magma continues to ascend, it sheds chlorine, and then fluorine. Increases in carbon dioxide typically occur six months to one month before eruption, while increases in sulfur dioxide precede eruptions by several weeks to several days. "And when we observe increases in fluorine from the craters," says Giammanco, "that means the magma is thereit's almost arrived at the surface." Constant Monitoring At 3,350 meters high, Etna dominates Sicily's temperate landscape with a peak that is white with snow for most of the year. But magma rising underground can warm the volcano's surface rock. Researchers make regular helicopter flights over Etna with infrared cameras that can see this heat, while stationary cameras keep a constant watch on the summit. By indicating places where the ground is heating up, thermal imaging can reveal the presence of hidden fractures through which magma may be moving toward the surface. Etna's volcanologists also collect many other kinds of data using a variety of instruments. GPS devices allow them to notice ground deformationbulging, stretching, or twisting of the earth. They also measure the length of existing fractures to note any changes. Among the more sophisticated tools is Doppler radar, which is not yet widespread among volcano observatories. The radar measures the velocity and quantity of ash and other material ejected during an eruption. Etna's emissions can reach as far as Africa and Greece. "We can use these data to simulate the eruption using computer models, and forecast dispersal of volcanic material in the atmosphere," explains Mauro Coltelli, the head of INGV. Scientists at INGV observe the wall of digital monitors that constantly relay Etna's vital signs. AMNH
  • 4. Much of the data collected on Etna are transmitted, in real time, to INGV's central control room in Catania. There, a wall of digital data screens showing seismic, gas, thermal, and other indicators keeps the pulse of this active system 24 hours a day, like the monitors of a patient in surgery. The Limits of Prediction Prediction of volcanic eruptions is not an exact science, yet a monitoring system as advanced as Etna's can give authorities months, weeks, or hours of warning that an eruption may come. "Only when we see chlorine and fluorine and when seismic activity begins can we tell the civil defense 'Okay, this is itan eruption will start in a matter of hours,'" says Giammanco. "It's more difficult to say early on where the next eruption will occur. Location can only be identified some hours before it begins." The monitoring system allowed INGV scientists to successfully alert airports several hours preceding Etna's most recent major eruption, which occurred in 2002 and 2003. Ash fell for two straight months on Catania, forcing people to carry umbrellas and wear masks to protect their lungs. The scientists also simulated the possible path of the lava flow, concluding that it would not endanger any towns. Because of their predictions, unnecessary evacuations were avoided. But volcanologists caution that it is impossible to predict every eruption. Sometimes, the system will flag moving magma that doesn't erupt at allit invades the crust but never reaches the surface. And in 2004, there was a "silent eruption," a slow flow of lava from an old fissure without the typical warning signs. "There was no change," notes Falsaperla. "That means that we must be aware of the possibility that an eruption could start even in this silent mode." Loud or quiet, Etna's restlessness shows no signs of flagging, and it needs constant technological vigilance so scientists can stay a step ahead.