Mount Etna and the 1971 eruption - Ash deposits from the new explosion crater, Etna 1971

1973; Royal Society; Volume: 274; Issue: 1238 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1098/rsta.1973.0034

ISSN

2054-0272

Autores

B. Booth, George Patrick Leonard Walker,

Tópico(s)

Geology and Paleoclimatology Research

Resumo

The weakly explosive activity in May to June 1971 from the new explosion crater high on the eastern side of Etna produced a pyroclastic fall deposit which is very poorly sorted on the crater rim , but is well sorted farther away. Grain-size parameters are given for 47 sieved samples, seven of which were collected from the ash-fall during the eruption. The initial strombolian-type activity soon changed as pre-existing pyroclastic debris slid into the crater, and thereafter the ejecta included much non-juvenile material derived from this debris. The ash fell in the form of small damp flocculated clumps, but as it dried out much of the dust-grade material was blown away by the wind. Such dust may account for much of the loess-like soil found on the vegetated lower slopes of Etna.

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