Abstract
AbstractWe applied ambient noise tomography to continuous data recorded by a dense seismic array deployed on the volcanic island of Lipari in the southern Tyrrhenian Sea. Since most of Lipari's seismicity occurs offshore and is not evenly distributed, this technique allowed us to obtain the first high‐resolution images beneath the island down to ∼2.5 km depth. Results show a complex seismic structure related to the various ages and compositions of the volcanic products characteristic of the different regions of the island. High shear wave velocities are found in western Lipari, where active hydrothermal vents and N‐S faults are mapped. Low wave speeds are revealed beneath southern and northeastern Lipari, where more recent volcanic activity developed along N‐S dike‐like structures that are aligned with rhyolitic vents. We suggest these dikes likely represent the probable pathways of future volcanic eruptions.
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