The ground deformations: tools, methods and application to some Italian volcanic regions
Abstract
The objective of this thesis is the study of slow deformation of the soil as a result of intrusion of magma
inside the magmatic chambers of some volcanoes located in Southern Italy. In particular, the Mt. Vesuvius
and Campi Flegrei caldera have been monitored over the last 7 years. The research has been
accomplished through the use of geodetic instrumentation (long baseline tiltmeters, Sacks-Evertson
dilatometers) that has been installed during the entire period of the research near the aforementioned
volcanoes. The data were recorded with the aid of data-logger, some of which are specifically designed for
the current research.
Campi Flegrei and Mt. Vesuvius are two volcanoes located near Naples, already monitored by Osservatorio
Vesuviano, the local office of INGV (Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia). In the last 40 years
systematic recordings of seismic data, of changes in distance of milestones, of leveling lines, of local
gravimetric anomalies and of GPS-InSAR data have been carried out. Starting from 2004, the monitoring
network maintained by Osservatorio Vesuviano has been enriched by the DINEV project: this is intended as
a complementary network of geodetic stations and consists in the installation of a small array of 6 borehole
stations (with an average depth of 120 m), each of which is constituted by a three components borehole
broadband seismometer Teledyne Geotech KS2000BH and a Sacks-Evertson areal strainmeter
(dilatometer). In addition, two three components surface broadband seismometers Guralp CMG 3-ESP
have been installed to control the anthropogenic surface noise.
In Campi Flegrei caldera, then, another array of instruments has been installed: two long baseline water
tiltmeters have been installed in Italian Army abandoned tunnels. The total length of tiltmeters is about 350
m for the northernmost tunnel, and of about 150 m for the southernmost tunnel. Tiltmeters were installed,
respectively, in axial and tangential direction in respect with the position of the Campi Flegrei magmatic
chamber.
The use of the instruments described in the current report allows to model the strain field in the range of low
frequencies, monitoring the deformation tensor for its non-diagonal components (pure tilt) by using the
tiltmeters, and the diagonal components (pure deformation) by using the dilatometers.
The monitoring is occurred for a time range of some years in length, needed to remove the seasonal drifts
due to changes in rainfalls, while the deformation due to changes in barometric pressure have been deleted
using linear regression techniques. [edited by author]