TY - JOUR
T1 - Multiscale integrated approach to understand the structure and evolution of the Neapolitan Yellow Tuff (NYT) caldera off the Campi Flegrei, eastern Tyrrhenian margin
AU - Pepe, Fabrizio
AU - Corradino, Marta
PY - 2016
Y1 - 2016
N2 - Resurgent calderas are among the largest and most dynamic volcanic structures on earth. They are typically associatedwith major eruptions with considerable volumes of pyroclastic deposits accompanied by large collapse structures and latestage deformation and uplift of the intra-caldera floor region. The Campi Flegrei is a vast volcanic area located on thecoastal zone of the Campania region of SW Italy, a large part of which develops off the Naples (Pozzuoli) Bay. The areahas been active since at least ~80 ka BP and is structurally dominated by a caldera collapse, ca. 8 km in diameter,associated with the eruption of the Neapolitan Yellow Tuff (NYT), a 30–50 km3 Dense Rock Equivalent ignimbrite datedat ca. 15 ka BP. In the past decades the shallow crustal structure of the NYT caldera has been mostly reconstructed usinggravimetric and magnetic data, seismic tomography images and modelling (analogue) experiments, whereas, thestructural elements of the caldera collapse in the Pozzuoli Bay have been largely inferred, based on seafloor morphologyand associated deposits. Despite the conspicuous research so far conducted off the Campi Flegrei, the stratigraphicarchitecture of the NYT caldera structure and inner caldera deposits is still poorly understood. This is mostly because ofthe intrinsic limitations due to the insufficient resolution of previous seismic datasets, as well as to the lack of reliablegeologic calibration of the offshore geophysical data.In this study we present a detailed structural and stratigraphic reconstruction of the submerged part of the NYT calderaobtained by full integration of swath bathymetry, high-resolution multichannel and single channel reflection seismics,gravity core, geochemical analysis of marine fluid vents and seafloor temperature profiling, recently acquired from thePozzuoli Bay, along with existing geological, geophysical and geodetic datasets on land. Particularly, the high-resolutionreflection seismic data offer unprecedented detailed insights into the stratigraphy and shallow structure of the NYT calderacollapse–ring fault zone–inner resurgence system. The results of this research provide a contribution to the understandingof structural style and timing of deformation of restless, resurgent calderas that develop along active continental margins.
AB - Resurgent calderas are among the largest and most dynamic volcanic structures on earth. They are typically associatedwith major eruptions with considerable volumes of pyroclastic deposits accompanied by large collapse structures and latestage deformation and uplift of the intra-caldera floor region. The Campi Flegrei is a vast volcanic area located on thecoastal zone of the Campania region of SW Italy, a large part of which develops off the Naples (Pozzuoli) Bay. The areahas been active since at least ~80 ka BP and is structurally dominated by a caldera collapse, ca. 8 km in diameter,associated with the eruption of the Neapolitan Yellow Tuff (NYT), a 30–50 km3 Dense Rock Equivalent ignimbrite datedat ca. 15 ka BP. In the past decades the shallow crustal structure of the NYT caldera has been mostly reconstructed usinggravimetric and magnetic data, seismic tomography images and modelling (analogue) experiments, whereas, thestructural elements of the caldera collapse in the Pozzuoli Bay have been largely inferred, based on seafloor morphologyand associated deposits. Despite the conspicuous research so far conducted off the Campi Flegrei, the stratigraphicarchitecture of the NYT caldera structure and inner caldera deposits is still poorly understood. This is mostly because ofthe intrinsic limitations due to the insufficient resolution of previous seismic datasets, as well as to the lack of reliablegeologic calibration of the offshore geophysical data.In this study we present a detailed structural and stratigraphic reconstruction of the submerged part of the NYT calderaobtained by full integration of swath bathymetry, high-resolution multichannel and single channel reflection seismics,gravity core, geochemical analysis of marine fluid vents and seafloor temperature profiling, recently acquired from thePozzuoli Bay, along with existing geological, geophysical and geodetic datasets on land. Particularly, the high-resolutionreflection seismic data offer unprecedented detailed insights into the stratigraphy and shallow structure of the NYT calderacollapse–ring fault zone–inner resurgence system. The results of this research provide a contribution to the understandingof structural style and timing of deformation of restless, resurgent calderas that develop along active continental margins.
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10447/295804
M3 - Meeting Abstract
SN - 2035-8008
VL - 40
JO - Rendiconti Online Societa Geologica Italiana
JF - Rendiconti Online Societa Geologica Italiana
ER -