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Colli Albani

Caldera · Italy · 949 m

The lake-filled Albano maar is part of the Alban Hills (Monte Albano) complex immediately SE of Rome. The Cavo scoria cone rises beyond the far rim. The Monte Albano complex contains a large Pleistocene stratovolcano with a 10-km-wide caldera. Subsequent eruptions occurred from a 5-km-wide central cone as well as craters and cones within the caldera and on its outer flanks. The youngest known magmatic eruption occurred during the late-Pleistocene.
The lake-filled Albano maar is part of the Alban Hills (Monte Albano) complex immediately SE of Rome. The Cavo scoria cone rises beyond the far rim. The Monte Albano complex contains a large Pleistocene stratovolcano with a 10-km-wide caldera. Subsequent eruptions occurred from a 5-km-wide central cone as well as craters and cones within the caldera and on its outer flanks. The youngest known magmatic eruption occurred during the late-Pleistocene. · Foto: Photo by Ichio Moriya (Kanazawa University). · Wikimedia Commons
Tipo
Caldera
Paese
Italy
Regione
European Volcanic Regions / Italian Peninsula Volcanic Provinces
Altitudine
949 m
Coordinate
41.757, 12.725
Ultima eruzione
Sconosciuto
Contesto tettonico
Subduction zone / Continental crust (> 25 km)
Forma vulcanica
Caldera
Roccia principale
Foidite
Sintesi geologica

The Colli Albani (Alban Hills) complex immediately SE of Rome contains a large Pleistocene stratovolcano with a 10 x 12 km caldera formed during an eruptive period with six major explosions that produced at least 280 km3 of ejecta between about 560,000 and 350,000 years ago. Subsequent eruptions occurred from a new 5-km-wide central cone and from many phreatomagmatic craters and cones within the Artemisio-Tuscolana caldera and on its outer flanks. The post-caldera eruptions have buried the western side of the caldera rim. The largest of the post-caldera craters is Lake Albano, a 2.5 x 4 km compound maar constructed at the WSW margin of the caldera in multiple stages dating back to about 69,000 years ago. The age of the most recent eruptions from the Albano maar is not known precisely; variable dates range from about 36,000 years ago to perhaps the Holocene, when several possibly non-volcanic lake overflow lahars occurred. Reported eruptions during the Roman period are uncertain, but subsequent seismic swarms lasting up to two years have been recorded.

Sintesi da Wikipedia

I Colli Albani sono un gruppo di rilievi, appartenenti all'Antiappennino laziale, che si innalzano nella campagna romana a sud-est di Roma, costituiti dalla caldera e dai coni interni di un vulcano quiescente: si tratta del cosiddetto Vulcano Laziale, attorno al quale si sviluppa la zona dei Castelli Romani.

Wikipedia · CC BY-SA · Leggi l'articolo completo

Storia delle eruzioni

Riepilogo (VEI nel tempo)
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600 BCE~600 BCE · 1 eruzioni · VEI max. ?600 BCE600 BCE599 BCE599 BCE599 BCE

Cronologia dettagliata

  1. 600 a.C.VEI ?Stima geologica
    BCE 600 – In corso
    Ariccia crater

Link esterni

⚠ Solo a scopo informativo. Non adatto a situazioni di emergenza.