Journal of Maps (Dec 2024)

Geohazard features of the Aeolian Island slopes and the North-Eastern Sicily offshore

  • Fabiano Gamberi,
  • Daniele Casalbore,
  • Michael Marani,
  • Marzia Rovere,
  • Alessandro Bosman,
  • Marilena Calarco,
  • Giacomo Dalla Valle,
  • Elisa Leidi,
  • Eleonora Martorelli,
  • Alessandra Mercorella,
  • Martina Pierdomenico,
  • Claudia Romagnoli,
  • Chiara Adami,
  • Francesco Giuseppe Falese,
  • Andrè Fascetti,
  • Valentina Ferrante,
  • Michela Ingrassia,
  • Erika Lai,
  • Cristian Montanaro,
  • Andrea Sposato,
  • Francesco Latino Chiocci

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/17445647.2024.2343314
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1

Abstract

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ABSTRACTThe MaGIC project (Marine Geohazard along the Italian Coasts) had the aim of mapping the geohazard in the Italian seas and resulted in the production of numerous maps covering parts of the Italian Seas. In this paper, we present the maps: ‘The submerged portions of the Aeolian volcanic islands and the north-eastern Sicilian margin’, located in the south-eastern Tyrrhenian Sea. Both areas are affected by active geological processes, which represent important geohazards elements. Inthe submarine parts of the Stromboli volcanoremobilization of volcaniclastic deposits occur along the Sciara del Fuoco, where small-scale instabilities may represent a source of geohazard. Hydrothermal activity occurs on Enarete and Enaretino conical seamounts. The north-eastern Sicilian margin has a narrow continental shelf. Numerous canyon heads indent the shelf and, sometimes, reach close to the coast. Canyons have often a retrogradational trend and further eventual landward shift through sliding can iendangeri coastal or offshore infrastructures. Many of the canyons connect with leveed channels with widespread sediment instability. In the Gioia Basin, some of the channels connect to form the Stromboli slope Valley. Volcanic unrest or local and regional earthquakes are proven to have caused submarine landslides and tsunamis.

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