Abstract

The occurrence of a former subaerial volcanic edifice off the Volturno River (Tyrrhenian Sea, Gulf of Gaeta) in the 41°N parallel is suggested by joint interpretation of multichannel seismic lines and ship-borne magnetic data. In the Campanian region igneous (volcanic) rocks are very close to the carbonate Mesozoic basement and seismics cannot always discriminate between them. A joint seismic-magnetic analysis was very effective in assessing the lithological nature of the bodies evidenced by both geophysical methods. Distortion analysis showed that the main magnetic source in the area is characterised by a not normal-polarity direction of the magnetization, similar to oth- er Pleistocene volcanoes in the Tyrrhenian region. Hence we argued that the overall magmatic emplacement for this source occurred during a reverse-polarity chron, very likely the 0.78-1.78 Ma time span. This magnetically-derived time constraint is in agreement with seismic stratigraphy that shows that the entire volcano is sealed by the Volturno River prograding delta from Middle Pleistocene to Present in age. Our interpreted volcano belongs to a set of in- ferred onshore and offshore volcanic edifices all lying along the 41°N parallel.

Highlights

  • Seismic and magnetic prospecting are among the most suitable methods for exploring volcanic areas and their integration may significantly improve detection of buried bodies

  • Magnetic boundary analysis may be matched with constraints imposed by seismic data and their interpretation

  • The dataset consists of shipborne magnetic data collected during two oceanographic cruises in 1992 and 1993 on board of R/V Urania (CNR, Italy) and a partially unpublished multichannel seismic grid

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Summary

Introduction

Seismic and magnetic prospecting are among the most suitable methods for exploring volcanic areas and their integration may significantly improve detection of buried bodies. Magnetic boundary analysis may be matched with constraints imposed by seismic data and their interpretation (e.g., seismic stratigraphy). In this paper we used such techniques over an area of the Latium-Campania offshore (Tyrrhenian Sea) located across the 41°N parallel. This area was relatively well known through seismics (Bartole et al, 1984; Aiello et al, 2000; Bruno et al, 2000) but poorly constrained by magnetic data. The close coexistence of carbonates and volcanic edifices, characterised by similar seismic velocity values, makes this site suitable for a joint magneto-seismic interpretation. The dataset consists of shipborne magnetic data collected during two oceanographic cruises in 1992 and 1993 on board of R/V Urania (CNR, Italy) and a partially unpublished multichannel seismic grid (courtesy of Agip, Eni division, Milan-Italy)

Geologic and geophysical setting
Seismic dataset
Magnetic dataset
Seismic data interpretation
Magnetic data analysis and interpretation
Discussion and conclusions
Full Text
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