Scientific Research

Overall, the volcanic products erupted in the Sicily Channel constitute a bimodal sodic, moderately alkaline association. The basic rocks, alkali basalts and hawaiites, are largely
predominant, and in many volcanic areas, as on the island of Linosa and in the submarine volcanoes of Adventure plateau and Graham and Nameless Banks, are the only products found. The general petrologic features of the volcanism of the Sicily Channel point to an anorogenic magmatism similar to that found in continental rift areas (Corti et al. 2006). The trace element distribution is comparable with that observed in intraplate basalts or ocean island basalts. Petrological evidence suggests that the ascent of magmas to the surface was relatively rapid, probably through channels superim- posed over the major tectonic discontinuities of the rift. Major and trace element data indicate an ocean island basalt affinity for Graham and Nameless Banks alkaline lavas and a depleted tholeiitic signature for one Pantelleria seamount, which had a shallower mantle source (Rotolo et al. 2006).
On a regional scale, the distribution of the positive magnetic anomalies appear to follow two main trends: one (where the largest magnetic anomaly was found) follows the axis of the Pantelleria Graben, slightly shifted to the south; the other situated along a broad NNE-SSW-oriented belt extending from Linosa Island to the eastern margin of the Nameless Bank. This belt partly coincides with that proposed by Argnani (1990) on the basis of bathymetric, volcanic, and seismic considerations, and was interpreted as a strike-slip transfer fault zone separating the rift system in two independent areas, the Pantelleria Graben to the west and the Malta and Linosa grabens to the east. The factors playing a major role in the distribution and affinity of the Sicily Channel volcanic rocks appear to be: (a) the petrological characteristics of the mantle source; (b) the geodynamic processes responsible of the crustal rifting, which in turn depends of the grade of intensity of the extensional stresses; (c) the presence of pre-existing crustal tectonic structures which favoured the rising of the mag- matic manifestations.
The main magnetic anomaly is closely related to a large magmatic body in correspondence to a boundary fault of the south–western Pantelleria Graben. Boundary faults seem to have played a crucial role in the distribution of volcanic manifestations, probably because they channeled the magmatic material along the principal fault planes. The other two anomalies seem to be either related to: (a) a sort of off-axis volcanism, because they are located relatively close to the boundary faults, but in an external position on the shoulders of the rift, as occurring in other divergent systems, like a segment of the East African Rift, where Bosworth (1987) described paired zones of volcanism and lithospheric thinning off-axis from the rift proper; or (b) to a focussing of magma emplacement in correspondence with a structurally complex area (where pre-existing structures are present) representing a transfer zone between the Pantelleria and Linosa/Malta grabens. Geophysical data show that the rifting in this sector of the African platform is a passive response to a regional stress field, allowing hot mantle rocks to penetrate locally the lithosphere. Ascend- ing magmas within the Pantelleria Graben floor seem to migrate from the S to E sector of the depression toward the N–W sector, which is almost entirely floored by igneous material, and where the volcanic edifice of the Pantelleria Island, elongated in the same direction as the rift itself, is emerged (Civile et al. 2010).
There are some analogies between the Sicily Channel volcanism and the main Ethiopian rift volcanism, where the structural control (both inherited and/or rift-related) on magma emplacement played a major role, with major magmatic features located in specific structural locations like boundary faults and transfer zones (Corti 2008). The sequence of events in this segment of the East African Rift system includes a first episode of volcanism (possibly with coeval doming), later followed by lithospheric rifting connected to the Afar plume, that in turn may be a superficial expression of a deeper (lower mantle) superp- lume (Corti 2009).

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A taste of Sicily


More of a sugar-spiked espresso than a milky cappuccino, Sicily will reward you with an intense bittersweet experience rather than anything lightweight and frothy. In Sicily it seems as though the sun shines brighter, the shadows are darker, and life is lived full on and for the moment. Overloaded with art treasures, undersupplied with infrastructure and continuously struggling to thwart Mafia-driven corruption, Sicily possesses some baffling social topography. Brace yourself to reconcile baroque architectural beauty in Catania with modern squalor in Palermo, artistic excellence with moral ambivalence and the rational with the sensual. This is an island to be visited with an open mind – and a healthy appetite; one factor remains a constant, and that is the uncompromisingly high quality of the cuisine.
After some 25 centuries of foreign domination, Sicilians are heir to an impressive cultural legacy, from the refined architecture of Magna Graecia to a beguiling, if contradictory, artistic fusion of Arab craftsmanship and Norman austerity. This complexity of culture is matched by a startling diversity of landscape that includes the smouldering Mt Etna, an aquamarine coastline with a tiara of Aeolian Islands and Parco Naturale Regionale Delle Madonie.
Today, Sicily’s new generation is loathe to remain trapped in the past. New ventures are seeing aristocratic entrepreneurs prising open the doors of some of Europe’s finest palazzi and villas, while sensitive agriturismi (farm stay accommodations) are shedding light on Sicily’s hidden rural treasures and national parks. Sicily also has a refreshing lack of neon-blazing entertainment and theme parks, which further helps preserve its individuality and appeal.

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The road to discovery

 

The road to discovery

In our previous posts we have talked about the Balck Smokers and their great scientific importance. The evidence that we have collected over the last few days, give us hope. As you know the Island Ferdinandea is an unknown destination and out of the reach of diving centers, which in this area can be counted on the fingers of one hand. The stories of those few divers told us of a few sightings of bubbles coming from the bottom. It is important to understand that the island, even after 200 years after its sinking, is unexplored. Over the years there have been some scientific expeditions, but none of this has ever made an objective study of the seabed with the help of divers. Those who have immersed, they did it with outdated equipment and always with air, reaching at maximum the foot of the volcano and only for a few minutes, limiting their activities in some sampling of rocks. The awareness of being the first to venture on those unknown depths in the middle of the Strait of Sicily is a strong stimulus and feeds the discovery of fire that burns within us. But back to the mysterious object of our research, those "Black Smokers" or "Fumaroli," which should provide basic information about the origin of the volcano. We have combined the testimonies of divers to Multibeam data in our possession and we were able to highlight two zones within which exist the possibility to find a clear rising gas coming from underground. Proceed according to schedule, our first goal is to map the volcanic cone and highlight in a first stage a series of geological and biological Main Target. The map will be a key tool in our subsequent search of the mysterious gas lift. To know every centimeter  of the environment where we make our research is an indispensable condition for our success. If we manage to find the Balck Smokers our task will be to film them and to sample the gas that escapes from them paying attention to everything around them. The data we collect and the video samples will be sent to our scientific directors, who will analyze and study them. There is no doubt, if we could find one of these gas lift, this would be an exceptional find and probably one of the first ever occurred in the Mediterranean Sea.
We are ready ... and you?
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Lost Island: What we are lookin' for Part II

 

Did you ever imagine that life could start at the very depths of the ocean floor? Some scientists hypothesize, with help from studies on “black smokers,” that underwater sea vents could be originators of life.

According to a 2007 report on livescience.com, geologists from Saint Louis University have discovered 1.43 billion-year-old fossils of deep-sea microbes next to fossils of sea vents. The new finding provides scientists with evidence that life may have started on the very bottom of the ocean floor.
Black smokers were discovered in 1977 as hydrothermal sea vents by scientists at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography. The initial black smoker found was located in the East Pacific Rise in the Pacific Ocean, near the Galápagos Islands. Underwater vents are also being discovered in the Atlantic Ocean and along the Pacific Antarctic Ridge. The Earth Institute at Columbia University says that the latest locations to search for sea vents is about 1,000 miles from the west coast of Antarctica, where geochemist Gisela Winckler thinks sea vents could be located. With help from her colleagues, they have pinpointed six spots on the remote Pacific Antarctic Ridge where they think sea vents could appear.
According to the scientists in the College of Earth, Ocean, and Environment at the University of Delaware, a hydrothermal vent is a geyser on the seafloor. A geyser on the seafloor would be similar to a spring; in this case it erupts periodically, ejecting a column of hot water and steam into the water above. These sea vents constantly discharge extremely-hot, mineral-rich water that helps sustain a varied population of organisms.
Some black smokers have chimney-like pinnacles, and are formed from suspended metals that precipitate out when the super-hot vent water meets the neighboring cold ocean water. The temperature of the water that comes out of the chimney of these vents surpasses 360 °C. Most black smokers are found to be at an average depth of about 2,100 meters in areas of seafloor spreading along the Mid-Ocean Ridge system. These black smokers are the hottest of vents, ejecting mainly iron and sulfide, thus making iron monosulfide. With this compound, the black color is produced, hence showing where the name came from.
"Most of the deep ocean is like a desert, but these vents are oases of life and weirdness," said Winckler. "The Pacific Antarctic ridge is one of the ridges we know least about."
“Wherever we look along the ridge, we find vents,” Christopher German said in a 2007 interview, “and the vents in different regions of the ocean host very different animals.” German, Chief Scientist of Deep Submergence at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts, conducts research on black smokers..
“Roughly 550 vent species have been discovered living in extreme temperature and pressure conditions, and new vent species are discovered at a rate of nearly two per month,”said Paul Tyler with the British National Oceanography Centre, Southampton.
Unique arrays of ecosystems are found around these underwater structures. People believed that all life on Earth sustained its energy from the sun; now that assumption is being challenged with proof of underwater creatures. Giant tubeworms, around eight feet tall take over most of the surrounding area, and clams cover the seafloor.
Creatures, such as eyeless shrimp and giant crabs, are also found around vents and get their food directly from black smokers. This is a process known as chemosynthesis. Bacteria in the water feed on noxious chemicals, and then smaller animals feed on these bacteria, and those smaller animals provide food for the larger animals. This creates a whole new ecosystem, separate from any other in the world of light, say experts.
These vents form on the seafloor, because in some regions along the Mid-Ocean Ridge, the colossal plates that form the Earth’s crust are spreading apart, constructing fractures and gaps in the bed of the seafloor. As seawater moves into openings, it becomes heated by magma that lies beneath Earth’s crust. As the water is boiling, it rises and looks for a path back out into the ocean through another opening; this creates the black smoker.
“I think that the idea that life originated from black smokers is a very plausible theory,” says Sam Berendzen, science instructor at Francis Howell High School. “However, we still need more evidence to resolve problems of the origin of life.”

Here some links to download pdf files on Black Smokers and a really cool video from ROV

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Lost Island Project: What we are lookin' for





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Explorin Mount Etna


Mount Etna  is an active stratovolcano on the east coast of Sicily, Italy, close to Messina and Catania. It lies above the convergent plate margin between the African Plate and the Eurasian Plate. It is the tallest active volcano on the European continent, currently standing 3,329 m (10,922 ft) high, though this varies with summit eruptions. It is the highest mountain in Italy south of the Alps. Etna covers an area of 1,190 km2 (459 sq mi) with a basal circumference of 140 km. This makes it by far the largest of the three active volcanoes in Italy, being about two and a half times the height of the next largest, Mount Vesuvius. Only Mount Teide in Tenerife surpasses it in the whole of the European–North-African region. In Greek Mythology, the deadly monster Typhon was trapped under this mountain by Zeus, the god of the sky and thunder and king of gods, and the forges of Hephaestus were said to also be located underneath it.
Mount Etna is one of the most active volcanoes in the world and is in an almost constant state of activity. The fertile volcanic soils support extensive agriculture, with vineyards and orchards spread across the lower slopes of the mountain and the broad Plain of Catania to the south. Due to its history of recent activity and nearby population, Mount Etna has been designated a Decade Volcano by the United Nations.In May 2013, it was accepted as a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and its official proclamation is scheduled for June.
Volcanic activity first took place at Etna about half a million years ago, with eruptions occurring beneath the sea off the ancient coastline of Sicily.About 300,000 years ago, volcanism began occurring to the southwest of the summit (centre top of volcano) then, before activity moved towards the present centre 170,000 years ago. Eruptions at this time built up the first major volcanic edifice, forming a stratovolcano in alternating explosive and effusive eruptions. The growth of the mountain was occasionally interrupted by major eruptions, leading to the collapse of the summit to form calderas.
From about 35,000 to 15,000 years ago, Etna experienced some highly explosive eruptions, generating large pyroclastic flows, which left extensive ignimbrite deposits. Ash from these eruptions has been found as far away as Rome, 800 km (497 mi) to the north.
Thousands of years ago, the eastern flank of the mountain experienced a catastrophic collapse, generating an enormous landslide in an event similar to that seen in the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens. The landslide left a large depression in the side of the volcano, known as 'Valle del Bove' (Valley of the Ox). Research published in 2006 suggested this occurred around 8000 years ago, and caused a huge tsunami, which left its mark in several places in the eastern Mediterranean. It may have been the reason the settlement of Atlit Yam (Israel), now below sea level, was suddenly abandoned around that time.
The steep walls of the valley have suffered subsequent collapses on numerous occasions. The strata exposed in the valley walls provide an important and easily accessible record of Etna's eruptive history.
The most recent collapse event at the summit of Etna is thought to have occurred about 2,000 years ago, forming what is known as the Piano Caldera. This caldera has been almost entirely filled by subsequent lava eruptions, but is still visible as a distinct break in the slope of the mountain near the base of the present-day summit cone.
Large lava flow from an eruption in 1928 led to the first (and only) destruction of a population centre since the 1669 eruption. The eruption started high on Etna's northeast flank on November 2. Then new eruptive fissures opened at ever lower elevation down the flank of the volcano. The third and most vigorous of these fissures opened late on 4 November at an unusually low elevation, approximately 1,200 m (3,937 ft) above sea-level, in a zone known as Ripe della Naca. The village of Mascali, lying down-slope of the Ripe della Naca, suffered obliteration in just two days, with the lava destroying nearly every building. Only a church and a few surrounding buildings survived in the north part of the village, called Sant'Antonino or "il quartiere". During the last days of the eruption, the flow interrupted the Messina-Catania railway line and destroyed the train station of Mascali. The event was used by Benito Mussolini's Fascist regime for propaganda purposes, with the evacuation, aid, and rebuilding operations being presented as models of fascist planning. Mascali was rebuilt on a new site, and its church contains the Italian fascist symbol of the torch, placed above the statue of Jesus Christ. In early November 2008, the town of Mascali commemorated the 80th anniversary of the eruption and destruction of the village with a number of public events where eyewitnesses shared their memories of the eruption.
Other major 20th-century eruptions occurred in 1949, 1971, 1981, 1983 and 1991–1993. In 1971, lava buried the Etna Observatory (built in the late 19th century), destroyed the first generation of the Etna cable-car, and seriously threatened several small villages on Etna's east flank. In March 1981, the town of Randazzo on the northwestern flank of Etna narrowly escaped destruction by unusually fast-moving lava flows. That eruption was remarkably similar to one in 1928 that destroyed Mascali. The 1991–1993 eruption saw the town of Zafferana threatened by a lava flow, but successful diversion efforts saved the town with the loss of only one building a few hundred metres from the town's margin. Initially, such efforts consisted of the construction of earth barriers built perpendicularly to the flow direction; it was hoped that the eruption would stop before the artificial basins created behind the barriers would be completely filled. Instead, the eruption continued, and lava surmounted the barriers, heading directly toward Zafferana. Engineers then decided to use explosives near the source of the lava flow, to disrupt a very efficient lava tube system through which the lava travelled for up to 7 km (4 mi) without essentially losing heat and fluidity. The main explosion on 23 May 1992 destroyed the tube and forced the lava into a new artificial channel, far from Zafferana, and it would have taken months to re-establish a long lava tube. Shortly after the blasting, the rate of lava emission dropped, and during the remainder of the eruption (until 30 March 1993) the lava never advanced close to the town again.
Following six years (1995–2001) of unusually intense activity at the four summit craters of Etna, the volcano produced its first flank eruption since 1991–1993 in July–August 2001. This eruption, which involved activity from seven distinct eruptive fissures mostly on the south slope of the volcano, was a mass-media eruption, because it occurred at the height of the tourist season and numerous reporters and journalists were already in Italy to cover the G8 summit in Genoa. It also occurred close to one of the tourist areas on the volcano, and thus was easily accessible. Part of the "Etna Sud" tourist area, including the arrival station of the Etna cable car, were damaged by this eruption, which otherwise was a rather modest-sized event by Etna standards.
In 2002–2003, a much larger eruption threw up a huge column of ash that could easily be seen from space and fell as far away as Libya, 600 km (370 mi) south across the Mediterranean Sea. Seismic activity in this eruption caused the eastern flanks of the volcano to slip by up to two metres, and many houses on the flanks of the volcano experienced structural damage. The eruption also completely destroyed the tourist station Piano Provenzana, on the northeastern flank of the volcano, and part of the tourist station "Etna Sud" around the Rifugio Sapienza on the south flank. Footage from the eruptions was recorded by Lucasfilm and integrated into the landscape of the planet Mustafar in the 2005 film Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith.The Rifugio Sapienza is near the site of a cable car station which had previously been destroyed in the 1983 eruption; it has now been rebuilt. Following a rather silent, slow and non-destructive lava outflow on the upper southeastern flank between September 2004 and March 2005, intense eruptions occurred at the Southeast Crater in July–December 2006. These were followed by four episodes of lava fountaining, again at the Southeast Crater, on 29 March, 11 April, 29 April and 7 May 2007. Ash emissions and Strombolian explosions started from a vent on the eastern side of the Southeast Crater in mid-August 2007.
On 4 September 2007 a spectacular episode of lava fountaining occurred from the new vent on the east side of the Southeast Crater, also producing a plume of ash and scoriae which fell over the east flank of the volcano. A lava flow travelled about 4.5 km (2.8 mi) into the uninhabited Valle del Bove. This eruption was visible far into the plains of Sicily, ending the following morning between the hours of 5 to 7 am local time.
An eruption on the morning of 13 May 2008, immediately to the east of Etna's summit craters was accompanied by a swarm of more than 200 earthquakes and significant ground deformation in the summit area. The eruption continued at a slowly diminishing rate for 417 days, until 6 July 2009, making this the longest flank eruption of Etna since the 1991–1993 eruption that lasted 473 days. Previous eruptions, in 2001, 2002–2003, and 2004–2005 had lasted 3 weeks, 3 months, and 6 months, respectively. Lava flows advanced 6.5 km during the first few days of this eruption but thereafter stagnated at much minor distances from the vents; during the last months of the eruption lava rarely advanced more than 1 km downslope.
Through January 2011 to February 2012, the summit craters of Etna were the site of intense activity. Frequent eruptions and ash columns forced the authorities to shut down the Catania airport on several occasions. The July 2011 episode also endagnered the Sapienza Refuge, the main tourist hub on the volcano, but the lava flow was successfully diverted.
In 2012 and 2013, activity subsided to more moderate levels, with regular but contained eruptions at Southeast Crater and Bocca Nuova.



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Documentation of the Hill of the Vulcanelli - National reserve of Macalube Aragona

Documentation Set in the Natural Reserve "Macalube of Aragona".
A series of little volcanoes of mud describing a lunar landscape.
The Reserve is born to protect a rare geologic phenomenon that, in analogy with the volcanic one, is defined sedimentary volcanism. This type of phenomenon has to be included in that superficial oil manifestations of gaseous type.
The sedimentary volcanism manifests itself in presence of gas submitted to certain pressure and in relationship with clays not consolidated which are intercalated in levels of saltuy water.
The gases of the Macalube are essentialy constituted be methane. These, owning to pressure, escape from the subsoil, through discontinuity fo the ground, dragging with itself clayey sediments and water that, deposing itself in the surface, gives place to a cone of mud, from whose summit, through a crater, the gas escapes.
There is therefore a morphological analogy with the volcanic apparatuses.
periodically the hillock of the Macalube is stunned by explosive eruptions, accompanied by roars, with expulsion of clayey material mixed to gas and water which are cast to notable height because of the pressure of gas accumulated, in the time, below its surface.
The Natural Integral Reserve Macalube of Aragona, is at a distance of about 4 km S.O. from Aragona and 15 k  N. from Agrigento. The area is characterized by sweet forms, constituted by predominantly clayey deposists and ploughed by a thick net of deep valleys, which are periodically crossed by the waters collected by seasonal precipitations.
In this general context strands the hill of the Vulcanelli.
It is a bare moor of grey and whitish colour, from which a series of little volcanoes of mud, tall around the meter, raise almost to remember a lunar landscape.

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