Sunday, February 13, 2011

Building the Landscape of Naples


One of the most famous and prominent features in the Province of Naples is Mt. Vesuvius, a composite volcano which sits inside the caldera of the older volcano Mt. Somma.  This complex is located over a slab window in the African plate, which is being subducted underneath the Eurasian Plate.  Vesuvius last erupted in 1944, beginning with lava flows from the crater and expanding to lava fountains.  It culminated in a Plinian eruption, exploding pyroclasts of tephra and ash, as seen in the photo below. 

picture sourced from http://www.wingsoverkansas.com/, taken from a World War II airman.

The map below shows the boundary of the African plate (right of the western shoreline of Italy) and the Eurasian plate, and the location of Mt. Vesuvius and other volcanoes in Italy.

The diagram below shows the section A-B from the map above, the subduction of the African plate under the Eurasian plate, and the magma rising through a volcanic conduit.


The Vesuvius cone, similar to what is seen today, is thought to have been created from the eruption of Mt. Somma in 79 A.D., resulting in the burying of the ancient city Pompeii.  The prominent crater in the foreground of the photo below is Mt. Vesuvius as it appears today, the ridge near the top of the photo is what remains of the rim of the Mt. Somma caldera.
Picture sourced from http://www.lifeinitaly.com/

Currently, the 4 million people who live in the Naples area are vulnerable to future eruptions.  The 79 A.D. eruption was the first recorded eruption in history by Pliny the Younger, hence the term Plinian eruption, from his description of watching the events from across the Gulf of Naples.  Those nearer captured the experience by the voids their bodies left in the ash and pumice that fell.  In the 1700 and 1800's, these voids were filled with plaster and are now on display.  The photos below display images from Pompeii.



A dog, with collar still on, being overtaken by the Nuee Ardente in Pompeii, 79 A.D.
Photo by Claus Ableiter, http://www.hilobrow.com/


This photo is taken from the ruins inside the Temple of Apollo in Pompeii, looking toward Mt. Vesuvius
I took this photo in 2009. 

Works Cited:
Ball, Jessica. Mt. Vesuvius - Italy. http://geology.com/volcanoes/vesuvius/. Site accessed 2/12/2011

Vesuvio National Park. http://www.lifeinitaly.com/tourism/campania/vesuvius-park. Posted 01/18/2010. Site accessed 2/12/2011.

4 comments:

  1. Hey Lisa, your post about the Province of Naples and its geographical location was well defined. I did not know that Province of Naples is located "over a slab window in the African plate." You well explained the forms and processes of its volcano. The photos are good. They illustrated your point and they help me to better understand your post about Naples.

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  2. Lisa,
    It is really interesting that Mt. Vesuvius sits inside the caldera of the older volcano Mt. Somma. You did a great job describing your forms and processes. The pictures you found were really interesting to look at and the layout was done really nicely. It was easy to understand and I learned some really interesting facts out about Naples.
    -Adrienne

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  3. Lisa,
    I am utterly jealous that you got to see Mt. Vesuvius in person! I never knew that it was possible for a volcano to sit inside a caldera of another volcano. Your visuals of the African plate being subducted underneath the Eurasian Plate aided in my understanding of how the volcano was created. I especially was interested reading about the detriment done to the people, after the eruption. It is sad, yet remarkable that scientists were able to find a fossilized dog after the eruption in 79 A.D. After reading about this area in Italy, I look forward to visiting the composite volcano and seeing it myself!

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  4. Hi Lisa!! I think your description's aided by diagrams and pictures helps to create great visuals of what it is you're talking about. I myself have been to Italy twice and still have not been to Naples. I think the diagram is the best feature on your blog in understanding what's going on. I also think if you showed or even talked more about what it relates to if any other parts around the world just to compare. It will give us the reader a good look at where else this has happened and why. Other than that it's the PERFECT blog :)

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