Annals of Geophysics (Sep 2016)

The marine activities performed within the TOMO-ETNA experiment

  • Mauro Coltelli,
  • Danilo Cavallaro,
  • Marco Firetto Carlino,
  • Luca Cocchi,
  • Filippo Muccini,
  • Antonino D’Alessandro,
  • Maria Eloisa Claude,
  • Clara Monaco,
  • Jesús M. Ibáñez,
  • Fabrizio Zgur,
  • Domenico Patanè,
  • Cosmo Carmisciano,
  • Giuseppe D’Anna,
  • Maria Teresa Pedrosa Gonzales,
  • Teresa Teixidò,
  • Roberto D’Anna,
  • Gioacchino Fertitta,
  • Giuseppe Passafiume,
  • Stefano Speciale,
  • Fausto Grassa,
  • Aristomenis P. Karageorgis,
  • Lorenzo Sormani,
  • Lorenzo Facchin,
  • Giampaolo Visnovic,
  • Diego Cotterle,
  • Rita Blanos,
  • Paolo Mansutti,
  • Attilio Sulli,
  • Fabrizio Cultrera,
  • Francisco Carrión,
  • Salvatore Rapisarda

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4401/ag-7081
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 59, no. 4

Abstract

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The TOMO-ETNA experiment was planned in order to obtain a detailed geological and structural model of the continental and oceanic crust beneath Mt. Etna volcano and northeastern Sicily up to the Aeolian Islands (southern Italy), by integrating data from active and passive refraction and reflection seismic methodologies, magnetic and gravity surveys. This paper focuses on the marine activities performed within the experiment, which have been carried out in the Ionian and Tyrrhenian Seas, during three multidisciplinary oceanographic cruises, involving three research vessels (“Sarmiento de Gamboa”, “Galatea” and “Aegaeo”) belonging to different countries and institutions. During the offshore surveys about 9700 air-gun shots were produced to achieve a high-resolution seismic tomography through the wide-angle seismic refraction method, covering a total of nearly 2650 km of shooting tracks. To register ground motion, 27 ocean bottom seismometers were deployed, extending the inland seismic permanent network of the Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia and a temporary network installed for the experiment. A total of 1410 km of multi-channel seismic reflection profiles were acquired to image the subsurface of the area and to achieve a 2D velocity model for each profile. Multibeam sonar and sub bottom profiler data were also collected. Moreover, a total of 2020 km of magnetic and 680 km of gravity track lines were acquired to compile magnetic and gravity anomaly maps offshore Mt. Etna volcano. Here, high-resolution images of the seafloor, as well as sediment and rock samples, were also collected using a remotely operated vehicle.

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