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Caldera di Santorini

Santorini

Vulcano a scudo · Greece · 367 m

The steep inner walls of Santorini drop steeply into the caldera bay. Pyroclastic flow deposits from four caldera-forming eruptions dating back to 100,000 years ago are exposed in the caldera walls in this N-looking view. The youngest caldera was formed about 3,500 years ago during the Minoan eruption of Santorini. The flat-topped peak on the left skyline is Skaros, a remnant of a shield volcano constructed within a previous caldera.
The steep inner walls of Santorini drop steeply into the caldera bay. Pyroclastic flow deposits from four caldera-forming eruptions dating back to 100,000 years ago are exposed in the caldera walls in this N-looking view. The youngest caldera was formed about 3,500 years ago during the Minoan eruption of Santorini. The flat-topped peak on the left skyline is Skaros, a remnant of a shield volcano constructed within a previous caldera. · Foto: Photo by Lee Siebert, 1994 (Smithsonian Institution). · Wikimedia Commons
Tipo
Vulcano a scudo
Paese
Greece
Regione
European Volcanic Regions / Hellenic Volcanic Arc
Altitudine
367 m
Coordinate
36.404, 25.396
Ultima eruzione
1950
Contesto tettonico
Subduction zone / Continental crust (> 25 km)
Forma vulcanica
Shield
Roccia principale
Dacite
Sintesi geologica

Santorini (Thera), in the Aegean Sea, has steep-walled caldera rim with villages that overlook an active volcanic island in the center of a caldera bay. The circular island group is composed of overlapping shield volcanoes cut by at least four partially overlapping calderas. The oldest southern caldera was formed about 180,000 years before present (BP), followed by the Skaros caldera about 70,000 BP, and then the Cape Riva caldera about 21,000 BP. The youngest caldera formed about 3,600 BP (around 1600 BCE) during the Late-Bronze-Age Minoan eruption that forced abandonment of the island. Post-Minoan eruptions beginning in 197 BCE constructed a series of lava domes and flows that form two islands near the center of the caldera. The latest eruption produced a small lava dome and flow in 1950, accompanied by explosive activity.

Sintesi da Wikipedia

La Caldera di Santorini è una grande caldera, per lo più sommersa, situata nel Mar Egeo meridionale, a circa 120 chilometri a nord di Creta, in Grecia. Sopra il livello del mare è visibile il gruppo circolare di isole di Santorini, costituito da Santorini, l’isola principale, Therasia e Aspronisi alla periferia, e le isole Kameni al centro. È stata designata come uno dei "Vulcani del Decennio".

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

Storia delle eruzioni

Riepilogo (VEI nel tempo)
Fai clic su una barra per vedere le singole eruzioni
1610 BCE~1412 BCE · 1 eruzioni · VEI max. 7226 BCE~28 BCE · 1 eruzioni · VEI max. 328 BCE~170 · 1 eruzioni · VEI max. 3566~763 · 1 eruzioni · VEI max. 41554~1752 · 2 eruzioni · VEI max. 31752~1950 · 5 eruzioni · VEI max. 21610 BCE819 BCE1709611752

Cronologia dettagliata

  1. 1950VEI 2Osservata
    1950-01-10 – 1950-02-02
    Nea Kameni (Liatsikas dome)
  2. 1939VEI 2Osservata
    1939-08-20 – 1941-07-02
    Nea Kameni (Triton, Ktenas, Fouque domes)
  3. 1928VEI 2Osservata
    1928-01-23 – 1928-03-17
    Nea Kameni (Naftilos dome)
  4. 1925VEI 2Osservata
    1925-08-11 – 1926-05
    Nea Kameni (Dafni dome)
  5. 1866VEI 2Osservata
    1866-01-26 – 1870-10-15
    Georgios, Afroessa and Reka domes
  6. 1707VEI 3Osservata
    1707-05-23 – 1711-09-14
    Nea Kameni
  7. 1570VEI 3Osservata
    1570 – 1573
    Mikri Kameni
  8. 726VEI 4Osservata
    726-07-15 – In corso
    NE side of Thia Island
  9. 46VEI 3Osservata
    46-12-31 – 47-02-01
    Thia Island
  10. 197 a.C.VEI 3Osservata
    BCE 197 – In corso
    Hiera Island
  11. 1610 a.C. (±14 anni)VEI 7Stima geologica
    BCE 1610 – In corso

Link esterni

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