Europe’s Most Active Volcano Just Got Stranger – Here’s Why Scientists Are Rethinking It
2 Articles
2 Articles
Europe’s Most Active Volcano Just Got Stranger – Here’s Why Scientists Are Rethinking It
New research suggests Mount Etna forms from deep mantle magma pockets, possibly classifying it as a rare “petit-spot” volcano rather than a typical tectonic or hotspot volcano. Mount Etna, located in Sicily, is the most active volcano in Europe. Yet scientists have long struggled to explain how it formed, as no existing geological model fully [...]
A new study reports that Etna is formed from magma pockets deep in the Earth's mantle, a fact that may classify it in a rare category of "petit-spot" volcanoes and not in the... The "rare" Etna is giving geologists a headache - ΙΝΑΦΤΕΜΟΠΟΡΙΚΙ
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