The Monster beneath Campi Flegrei
Posted: Thu Sep 04, 2025 8:42 pm
It was long suspected.
It was inferred from on-shore and off-shore investigations.
But the vast caldera which *had* to underlay area could not be confirmed beyond a short arc.
Until now...
First graphic is scary enough, several significant, twitchy faults aligned with activity.
The second is scarier, as reveals the ancient caldera's 'ring fault', most of it off-shore..
Fortunately, the yo-yo Bradyseism --It is a real word-- for which that area is infamous seems to be due to ground-water, not actual magma shifts. But that's another story...
AI model reveals hidden earthquake swarms and faults in Italy's Campi Flegrei
https://phys.org/news/2025-09-ai-reveal ... warms.html
quote:
Campi Flegrei is an active volcano located within the densely populated Neapolitan area. This volcanic region, which is home to more than 500,000 people, has experienced episodes of unrest dating back to the late 1950s.
The last period of unrest started in 2005, with a significant increase in the seismicity in 2018, including five earthquakes above a magnitude 4 in the first eight months of 2025. The new research expands the seismicity recorded by monitoring stations from 2022 to 2025 from about 12,000 to more than 54,000 earthquakes.
The data revealed two faults converging under the town of Pozzuoli west of Naples, which has been continuously monitored since the early 1980s, when unrest caused the land to rise more than 6 feet and more than 16,000 earthquakes prompted the evacuation of 40,000 residents.
...
Campi Flegrei is an 8-mile-wide caldera, a massive depression formed by major volcanic eruptions about 39,000 and 15,000 years ago. In addition to eruptions, the caldera experiences uplift and subsidence—rising and sinking of the land called bradyseism.
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It was inferred from on-shore and off-shore investigations.
But the vast caldera which *had* to underlay area could not be confirmed beyond a short arc.
Until now...
First graphic is scary enough, several significant, twitchy faults aligned with activity.
The second is scarier, as reveals the ancient caldera's 'ring fault', most of it off-shore..
Fortunately, the yo-yo Bradyseism --It is a real word-- for which that area is infamous seems to be due to ground-water, not actual magma shifts. But that's another story...
AI model reveals hidden earthquake swarms and faults in Italy's Campi Flegrei
https://phys.org/news/2025-09-ai-reveal ... warms.html
quote:
Campi Flegrei is an active volcano located within the densely populated Neapolitan area. This volcanic region, which is home to more than 500,000 people, has experienced episodes of unrest dating back to the late 1950s.
The last period of unrest started in 2005, with a significant increase in the seismicity in 2018, including five earthquakes above a magnitude 4 in the first eight months of 2025. The new research expands the seismicity recorded by monitoring stations from 2022 to 2025 from about 12,000 to more than 54,000 earthquakes.
The data revealed two faults converging under the town of Pozzuoli west of Naples, which has been continuously monitored since the early 1980s, when unrest caused the land to rise more than 6 feet and more than 16,000 earthquakes prompted the evacuation of 40,000 residents.
...
Campi Flegrei is an 8-mile-wide caldera, a massive depression formed by major volcanic eruptions about 39,000 and 15,000 years ago. In addition to eruptions, the caldera experiences uplift and subsidence—rising and sinking of the land called bradyseism.
/