Magma Pooling Beneath Infamous Greek Volcano
By Douglas Main, OurAmazingPlanet Staff Writer | LiveScience.com – 4 hrs ago
Molten rock is pooling beneath Greece's Santorini volcano, the site of
one of the largest eruptions in the past 10,000 years. That eruption,
which took place about 3,600 years ago, wiped out the Minoan
civilization of the Greek islands and may have spawned the legend of the
lost city of Atlantis.
In the past 1.5 years, the magma chamber beneath the volcanic island
has ballooned by as much as 350 million cubic feet (20 million cubic
meters), or up to 15 times the size of London's Olympic Stadium. This
giant mass of magma has caused the island to rise by as much as 5.5
inches (14 centimeters), according to a new study published yesterday
(Sept. 9) in the journal Nature Geoscience.
This research follows reports earlier in the year of renewed earthquake activity beneath the volcano
after it had been silent for the past 25 years. The reports have
spurred concerns the volcano could erupt in the near future, but when
that might happen is still unclear, researchers said in a statement.
"Before this work, we didn't really know how the volcano behaved during
the periods of time between eruptions," David Pyle, an Oxford
University researcher and study co-author, told OurAmazingPlanet. "Now,
it looks as though the magma chambers beneath volcanoes like Santorini
grow in spurts."
When the volcano erupted in approximately 1620 B.C., it created tsunamis 40 feet (12 meters) tall
that destroyed much of the civilization flourishing in and around the
Aegean Sea. Much of the previous island of Santorini was destroyed or
submerged.From the air, the resulting caldera, or volcanic crater, appears as a small cluster within the bigger collection of Greek islands in the Aegean Sea.
Earlier this year, global positioning system (GPS) sensors placed on
the caldera detected renewed movement, measuring a series of small
earthquakes. Seismic activity can trigger eruptions and are often a clue
that a volcano may be preparing an outburst in the near future. But the
connection is far from well-understood; and in the past few months,
seismic activity has dropped off once again, according to the statement.
If the volcano did erupt, it wouldn't be likely to create nearly as
much havoc is it did in the time of the Minoans, since it is much
smaller today than it was in the past. But it's still important to keep
an eye on the volcano, the researchers warn. [History's 10 Biggest Eruptions]
"Although Santorini is well known for its large explosive eruptions,
these probably only happen every 20,000 years or so," Pyle said.
There has been much speculation as to whether the Santorini eruption
inspired the legend of Atlantis, which Plato said drowned in the ocean.
Although someexperts think the legend of Atlantis was just invented,
others say the explosion might have given rise to the tale of a lost
empire by helping to wipe out the real-life Minoan civilization that
once thrived in the Mediterranean.
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