Bibcode
Amoruso, A.; Crescentini, L.; Linde, A. T.; Sacks, I. S.; Scarpa, R.; Romano, P.
Bibliographical reference
Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 34, Issue 22, CiteID L22313
Advertised on:
11
2007
Journal
Citations
25
Refereed citations
25
Description
Sources responsible for volcanic unrest produce characteristic surface
deformation. Given a sufficient number of distributed observation
points, inversion is the preferred procedure for retrieving the source
parameters of location and volume or pressure change. Most often the
solutions have been for point sources embedded in a homogeneous
half-space. Recent work indicates that layered structures, particularly
those with soft superficial layers, significantly perturb the
deformation pattern compared with that for the homogeneous medium. We
apply the methods of L. Crescentini and A. Amoruso to data for the most
recent mini-uplift in the Campi Flegrei caldera and show that models
using a homogeneous medium cannot adequately fit all the data.
Incorporating a layered structure appropriate for Campi Flegrei allows a
significantly better fit, avoiding characteristic discrepancies which
are revealed by a synthetic test. Failure to use such structure results
in incorrect source parameters, possibly leading to misleading
geophysical interpretations.