Search results for "Mud volcano"

showing 3 items of 13 documents

Geochemistry of gases and waters discharged by the mud volcanoes at Paternò, Mt. Etna (Italy)

1996

Approximately 20 km south of Mt. Etna craters, at the contact between volcanic and sedimentary formations, three mud volcanoes discharge CO2-rich gases and Na–Cl brines. The compositions of gas and liquid phases indicate that they are fed by a hydrothermal system for which temperatures of 100–150 °C were estimated by means of both gas and solute geothermometry. The hydrothermal system may be associated with CO2-rich groundwaters over a large area extending from the central part of Etna to the mud volcanoes. Numerous data on the He, CH4, CO2 composition of the gases of the three manifestations, sampled over the past 5 years, indicate clearly that variations are due to separation processes of…

geographyVolcanic hazardsgeography.geographical_feature_categoryVolcanoImpact craterGeochemistry and PetrologyGeochemistrySedimentary rockVolcanismSedimentologyGeologyHydrothermal circulationMud volcano
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Focused and diffuse effluxes of CO2 from mud volcanoes and mofettes south of Mt. Etna (Italy).

2007

Abstract Several sites with anomalous emissions of carbon dioxide were investigated in the region south of Mt. Etna volcano in order to assess the types of emission (focused and/or diffuse), their surface extension and the total output of CO 2 . Most of the studied emissions are located on the southwest boundary of Mt. Etna, near the town of Paterno. They consist of three mud volcanoes (known as Salinelle), one spring with bubbling gas (Acqua Grassa) and one area of diffuse degassing (Pescheria). Another site (Naftia Lake) with remarkable gas emissions (bubbling gas into a lake as well as adjacent areas of diffuse soil degassing) is located further southwest of Mt. Etna in an area of extinc…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEarth scienceGeochemistryVolcanismAtmosphereTectonicsGeophysicsVolcanoGeochemistry and PetrologyMagmaCO2QuaternaryGeothermal gradientGeologyMud volcano
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Mantle-derived fluids in Central Mediterranean: Geochemical and geophysical constrains on sources of fluids and migration

2013

The geodynamics of the central Mediterranean is characterized by the interaction between the European plate and the African’s. In this setting Sicily is a sector of the Appenine-Maghrebide accretionary prism, which is located between two areas affected by extensional tectonics (Sicily Channel to the south and the Thyrrenian back arc basin to the north). Significant mantle-derived helium (0.4<R/Ra<2.8; R=3He/4He in the sample, Ra in atmosphere) is found in the CH4 and N2-CO2 rich fluids released in central western Sicily, a region without evidence of recent magmatism. CH4- dominated gases are released from mud volcanoes localized in an area of both low heat flow and seismicity. On the contra…

helium mud volcanoes
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