Abstract
Electro-optical distance measurements made on the summit of Mt. Etna from 1971 to 1974 show evidence of large surface deformation of the volcano. This deformation cannot be satisfactorily analysed in terms of the models of subsurface magma reservoirs of various geometries that have been previously used, as they have, for instance, on Kilauea in Hawaii. A model that gives a better fit between the observed and computed data involves horizontal, radial strain about an open, cylindrical magma column. In this model, strain is inversely proportional to the square of the distance from the centre of the deformation. This strain pattern is probably confined to the immediate vicinity of the summit vents and is of a different nature lower down the volcano. Tiltmeter, precise levelling and distance measurement data collected over the period of a small flank eruption in January–March 1974 indicate that the eruption was fed by magma through a conduit from the summit reservoir system of the Chasm and Bocca Nuova. Inflation of the summit around the Northeast Crater, which had been measured since 1971, continued despite the flank eruption, and eruptive activity was resumed at the Northeast Crater in September 1974.
Published Version
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