WIDE SCALE TRIGGERING FOR VOLCANIC ACTIVITY OF TERRESTRIAL AND EXTRATERRESTRIAL ORIGIN

Volcanic activity is considered one of the possible causes for mass extinctions occurred during the geologic history of the Earth. Volcanic products from high energetic explosive eruptions, ejected up to the stratosphere and dispersed worldwide or on a regional scale by atmospheric currents, may sig...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Madonia, Paolo
Other Authors: Madonia, Paolo; Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, Sezione Palermo, Palermo, Italia, Stivaletta, Nunzia; Italian Astrobiology Society, Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, Sezione Palermo, Palermo, Italia, Stivaletta, Nunzia, Italian Astrobiology Society
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: 2009
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2122/5244
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Summary:Volcanic activity is considered one of the possible causes for mass extinctions occurred during the geologic history of the Earth. Volcanic products from high energetic explosive eruptions, ejected up to the stratosphere and dispersed worldwide or on a regional scale by atmospheric currents, may significantly change the amount of solar irradiance received at ground level, causing dramatic climatic changes on their own responsible for the mass extinctions. The amount of energy, i.e. the amount of magma involved in the eruption, needed for such a kind of phenomena is not (fortunately for vivents) generable by all the volcanoes, but only by a category of large dimension structure known as “supervolcanoes”. The most famous actual supervolcano is the Yellowstone Caldera, located in Central USA, potentially able to generate an eruption so energetic to cause the partial or total extinction of the most of the vivents of the entire world. On a smaller spatial and energetic scale, one of the volcanic eruptions that changed the climatic scenery of the northern emisphere was from the Hekla volcano (Iceland) in the XVIII century, whose products were dispersed up to the African continent. One of the long lasting effects of this eruption could have been the formation of a permanent ice body into a cave on Mt.Etna (Sicily), known as “Grotta del Gelo (Frost Cave)”, representing today the southernmost permanent ice accumulation of the northern emisphere. Another possible cause for mass extinctions is the simultaneous eruption of several volcanoes, possibly triggered by a common cause. Recent studies based on spatial geodesy demonstrated that, at global terrestrial scale, the shallower portion of the solid Earth, better known as “crust”, is affected by vertical displacements of the order of few centimetres, induced by the combined effects of atmospheric pressure, its water content, ice and snow coverage at high latitudes, etc. Inflation and deflation cycles of the crust are theoretically able to cause permeability variations of ...