1989
DOI: 10.1016/0377-0273(89)90046-2
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Location and orientation of eruptive fissures and feederdykes at Mount Etna; influence of gravitational and regional tectonic stress regimes

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Cited by 169 publications
(81 citation statements)
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“…In the concept of volcano spreading (see Borgia et al, 2000 for a review), the gravity field of a volcano directs the paths of individual dike intrusions and entire rift zones (Nakamura 1980;Dieterich 1988). On the eastern flank of Mount Etna, for instance, dikes intrude along the topographic crest around the deep and several km-wide 'Valle del Bove ' (McGuire and Pullen 1989;Borgia et al 2000). There too, strengths and inclination of the subvolcanic strata may significantly influence the development of rift zones and unstable flanks.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In the concept of volcano spreading (see Borgia et al, 2000 for a review), the gravity field of a volcano directs the paths of individual dike intrusions and entire rift zones (Nakamura 1980;Dieterich 1988). On the eastern flank of Mount Etna, for instance, dikes intrude along the topographic crest around the deep and several km-wide 'Valle del Bove ' (McGuire and Pullen 1989;Borgia et al 2000). There too, strengths and inclination of the subvolcanic strata may significantly influence the development of rift zones and unstable flanks.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lipman 1980;McGuire and Pullen 1989;Walter and Schmincke 2002;Walter and Troll 2003). Rift curvature takes place due to the stress field reorientation near an unstable volcano flank.…”
Section: Development Of a Triaxial Rift Zonementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Historical activity is marked by eruptions from the summit vents and also by effusive eruptions lower down on the flanks that are fed by laterally propagating dykes. These follow preferential routes that define rift zones, the most important of which trend north and south from the summit (McGuire & Pullen 1989). The volcano's most notable topographic feature is the Valle del Bove (figure 1), a large (5 × 8 km) amphitheatre cut into the eastern flank, bounded by cliffs up to 1 km high and opening towards the Ionian Sea.…”
Section: Volcano Lateral Collapse At Mount Etnamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The volcano's most notable topographic feature is the Valle del Bove (figure 1), a large (5 × 8 km) amphitheatre cut into the eastern flank, bounded by cliffs up to 1 km high and opening towards the Ionian Sea. More than 100 exposed dykes in the cliff walls mark the positions of east-northeast (ENE) and southeast (SE) trending defunct rift zones (McGuire & Pullen 1989), whose intersection is bisected by the long axis of the collapse amphitheatre (figure 1). While an origin owing to prehistoric lateral collapse is now corroborated by subaerial and offshore stürtzstrom deposits adjacent to the amphitheatre's open, downslope, outlet (e.g.…”
Section: Volcano Lateral Collapse At Mount Etnamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[4] Tectonics of Mount Etna is the result of the interaction between the regional tectonics and local-scale volcanorelated processes [McGuire and Pullen, 1989]. The western flank of the volcano is affected by a modest tectonic activity, the Ragalna and Calcerana faults [Azzaro, 1999] being the main structures ( Figure 1a).…”
Section: Local Geology and Structural Settingmentioning
confidence: 99%