Frontiers in Earth Science (Jul 2021)

The Seismicity of Lipari, Aeolian Islands (Italy) From One-Month Recording of the LIPARI Array

  • Francesca Di Luccio,
  • Patricia Persaud,
  • Luigi Cucci,
  • Alessandra Esposito,
  • Roberto Carniel,
  • Guillermo Cortés,
  • Danilo Galluzzo,
  • Robert W. Clayton,
  • Guido Ventura,
  • Guido Ventura

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/feart.2021.678581
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Seismic activity in volcanic settings could be the signature of processes that include magma dynamics, hydrothermal activity and geodynamics. The main goal of this study is to analyze the seismicity of Lipari Island (Southern Tyrrhenian Sea) to characterize the dynamic processes such as the interaction between pre-existing structures and hydrothermal processes affecting the Aeolian Islands. We deployed a dense seismic array of 48 autonomous 3-component nodes. For the first time, Lipari and its hydrothermal field are investigated by a seismic array recording continuously for about a month in late 2018 with a 0.1–1.5 km station spacing. We investigate the distribution and evolution of the seismicity over the full time of the experiment using self-organized maps and automatic algorithms. We show that the sea wave motion strongly influences the background seismic noise. Using an automatic template matching approach, we detect and locate a seismic swarm offshore the western coast of Lipari. This swarm, made of transient-like signals also recognized by array and polarization analyses in the time and frequency domains, is possibly associated with the activation of a NE-SW fault. We also found the occurrence of hybrid events close to the onshore Lipari hydrothermal system. These events suggest the involvement of hot hydrothermal fluids moving along pre-existing fractures. Seismological analyses of one month of data detect signals related to the regional tectonics, hydrothermal system and sea dynamics in Lipari Island.

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