Dictionary Definition
Vesuvius n : a volcano in southwestern Italy on
the Mediterranean coast; a Plinian eruption in 79 AD buried Pompeii
and killed Pliny the Elder; last erupted in 1944 [syn: Mount
Vesuvius, Mt.
Vesuvius]
User Contributed Dictionary
Extensive Definition
Mount Vesuvius (Italian:
Monte Vesuvio, Latin:
Mons Vesuvius) is an active
stratovolcano east
of Naples,
Italy. It is
the only volcano on the
European
mainland to have erupted within the last hundred
years, although it is not currently erupting. The two other
volcanoes
in Italy, (Etna and Stromboli) are
located on islands.
Vesuvius is on the
coast of the Bay of
Naples, about nine kilometres (six miles) east of Naples and a short
distance from the shore. It is conspicuous in the beautiful
landscape presented by the Bay of
Naples, when seen from the sea, with Naples in the foreground.
Vesuvius
is best known for its eruption in AD 79 that led to the destruction
of the Roman cities
of Pompeii
and Herculaneum. It
has erupted many times since and is today regarded as one of the
most dangerous volcanoes in the world because
of the population of 3,000,000 people now living close to it and
its tendency towards explosive eruptions. It is the most densely
populated volcanic region in the world.
Mount Vesuvius was regarded by the Greeks and Romans as
being sacred to the hero
and demigod Heracles and the
town of Herculaneum, built at its base, was named after him.
Origin of the name
Some of the theories about the origin of the name Vesuvius include:- Hercules was son of the god Zeus and Alcmene of Thebes. Zeus was also known as Huēs () in his aspect as the god of rains and dews. Hercules was thus alternatively known as Huēsou huios (), "Son of Hues." Transliterating the "ου" as "V" (as is normally done), and the other upsilons (with rough breathing) also by V (rather than the usual "HY") and changing to the Latin nominative ending "us", gives VESVVIVS — Vesuvius.
- From the Oscan word festf which means "smoke".
- From the Proto-Indo-European root ves- = "hearth"
Physical appearance
Vesuvius is a distinctive "humpbacked" mountain,
consisting of a large cone (Gran
Cono) partially encircled by the steep rim of a summit caldera caused by the collapse
of an earlier, and originally much higher structure called Monte
Somma. The Gran Cono was produced during the eruption of 79. For
this reason, the volcano is also called Somma-Vesuvius or
Somma-Vesuvio.
The caldera started forming during an eruption
around 17,000 (or 18,300) years ago and was enlarged by later
paroxysmal eruptions ending in the one of 79. This structure has
given its name to the term "somma
volcano", which describes any volcano with a summit caldera
surrounding a newer cone.
The height of the main cone has been constantly
changed by eruptions but presently is 1,281 m (4,202 ft). Monte
Somma is 1,149 m (3,770 ft) high, separated from the main cone by
the valley of Atrio di Cavallo, which is some 3 miles (5 km) long.
The slopes of the mountain are scarred by lava flows but are
heavily vegetated, with scrub at higher altitudes and vineyards lower down. Vesuvius
is still regarded as an active volcano, although its current
activity produces little more than steam from vents at the bottom
of the crater. Vesuvius is a stratovolcano at the
convergent
boundary where the African
Plate is being subducted beneath the
Eurasian
Plate. Its lava is
composed of viscous andesite. Layers of lava,
scoria, volcanic
ash, and pumice make
up the mountain.
Formation
Vesuvius was formed as a result of the collision
of two tectonic
plates, the African and
the Eurasian.
The former was pushed beneath the latter, deeper into the earth.
The crust material became heated until it melted, forming magma, a type of liquid rock.
Because magma is less dense than the solid rock around it, it was
pushed upward. Finding a weak place at the Earth's surface it broke
through, producing the volcano.
The volcano is one of several which form the
Campanian
volcanic arc. Others include Campi
Flegrei, a large caldera a few kilometres to the
north west, Mount
Epomeo, 20 kilometers to the west on the island of Ischia, and several
undersea volcanoes to the south. The arc forms the southern end of
a larger chain of volcanoes produced by the subduction process described
above, which extends northwest along the length of Italy as far as
Monte
Amiata in Southern Tuscany. Vesuvius
is the only one to have erupted within recent history, although
some of the others have erupted within the last few hundred years.
Many are either extinct or have not erupted for tens of thousands
of years.
Eruptions
Vesuvius has erupted many times. The famous
eruption in 79 was preceded by numerous others in prehistory,
including at least three significantly larger ones, the best known
being the Avellino
eruption around 1800 BC which engulfed several Bronze Age
settlements. Since 79, the volcano has also erupted repeatedly, in
172, 203, 222, possibly 303, 379, 472, 512, 536, 685, 787, around 860, around 900, 968, 991, 999, 1006, 1037, 1049, around 1073, 1139, 1150, and there may
have been eruptions in 1270, 1347, and 1500. The volcano
erupted again in 1631, six times in the
18th
century, eight times in the 19th century
(notably in 1872), and in 1906, 1929, and 1944. There has been
no eruption since 1944, and none of the post-79 eruptions were as
large or destructive.
The eruptions vary greatly in severity but are
characterized by explosive outbursts of the kind dubbed Plinian
after Pliny the
Younger, the Roman writer who observed the 79 eruption, during
which his uncle, the naturalist Pliny the
Elder, died. On occasion, the eruptions have been so large that
the whole of southern Europe has been blanketed by ash; in 472 and
1631, Vesuvian ash fell on Constantinople
(Istanbul), over
1,200 km away. A few times since 1944, landslides in the crater
raised clouds of ash dust, which caused false alarms of an
eruption.
Before 79
The mountain started forming 25,000 years ago.
Although the area has been subject to volcanic activity for at
least 400,000 years, the lowest layer of eruption material from the
Somma mountain lies on top of the 34,000 year-old Campanian Ignimbrite
produced by the Campi
Flegrei complex, and was the product of the Cordola plinian eruption 25,000 years
ago.
It was then built up by a series of lava flows,
with some smaller explosive eruptions interspersed between them.
However, the style of eruption changed around 19,000 years ago to a
sequence of large explosive plinian eruptions, of which the 79 one
was the last. The eruptions are named after the tephra deposits
produced by them:
- The Basal Pumice (Pomici di Base) eruption, 18,300 years ago, VEI 6, was probably the most violent of these eruptions and saw the original formation of the Somma caldera. The eruption was followed by a period of much less violent, lava producing eruptions.
- The Green Pumice (Pomici Verdoline) eruption, 16,000 years ago, VEI 5.
- The Mercato eruption also known as Pomici Gemelle or Ottaviano 8,000 years ago, VEI 6, followed a smaller explosive eruption around 11,000 years ago (called the Lagno Amendolare eruption).
- The Avellino eruption (Pomici di Avellino), 1660 BC ± 43 years, VEI 6, followed two smaller explosive eruptions around 5,000 years ago. The Avellino eruption vent was apparently 2 km west of the current crater, and the eruption destroyed several Bronze Age settlements. The remarkably well-preserved remains of one were discovered in May 2001 near Nola by Italian archaeologists, with huts, pots, livestock and even the footprints of animals and people, as well as skeletons. The residents had hastily abandoned the village, leaving it to be buried under pumice and ash in much the same way that Pompeii was later preserved. The eruption was larger than the ones of 79 (VEI 5) and 1631 (VEI 4) with pyroclastic surge deposits distributed to the northwest of the vent, the surges travelling as far as 15 km from it, and lie up to 3 m deep in the area now occupied by Naples.
The volcano then entered a stage of more
frequent, but less violent, eruptions until the most recent plinian
eruption which destroyed Pompeii.
The last of these may have been in 217 BC. There were
earthquakes in Italy during that year and the sun was reported as
being dimmed by a haze or dry fog. Plutarch wrote of
the sky being on fire near Naples and Silius
Italicus mentioned in his epic poem Punica that
Vesuvius had thundered and produced flames worthy of Mount Etna in
that year, although both authors were writing around 250 years
later. Greenland
ice core
samples of around that period show relatively high acidity, which
is assumed to have been caused by atmospheric hydrogen
sulfide.
The mountain was then quiet for hundreds of years
and was described by Roman
writers as having been covered with gardens and vineyards, except at the top
which was craggy. Within a large circle of nearly perpendicular
cliffs was a flat space large enough for the encampment of the army
of the rebel gladiator Spartacus in
73 BC. This
area was doubtless a crater.
The mountain may have had only one summit at that time, judging by
a wall painting, "Bacchus and Vesuvius", found in a Pompeiian
house, the House of the Centenary (Casa del Centenario).
Several surviving works written over the 200
years preceding the 79 eruption describe the mountain as having had
a volcanic nature, although Pliny the Elder did not depict the
mountain in this way in his Naturalis
Historia:
- The Greek historian Strabo (ca 63 BC-AD 24) described the mountain in Book V, Chapter 4 of his Geographica as having a predominantly flat, barren summit covered with sooty, ash-coloured rocks and suggested that it might once have had "craters of fire". He also perceptively suggested that the fertility of the surrounding slopes may be due to volcanic activity, as at Mount Etna.
- In Book II of De Architectura, the architect Vitruvius (ca 80-70 BC -?) reported that fires had once existed abundantly below the mountain and that it had spouted fire onto the surrounding fields. He went on to describe Pompeiian Pumice as having been burnt from another species of stone.
- Diodorus Siculus (ca 90 BC — ca 30 BC), another Greek writer, wrote in Book IV of his Bibliotheca Historica that the Campanian plain was called fiery (Phlegrean) because of the mountain, Vesuvius, which had spouted flame like Etna and showed signs of the fire that had burnt in ancient history.
By 79 the area was, as now, densely populated
with villages, towns and small cities like Pompeii, and its slopes
were covered in vineyards and farms.
Eruption of 79
By the 1st century,
Pompeii was
only one of a number of towns located around the base of Mount
Vesuvius. The area had a substantial population which grew
prosperous from the region's renowned agricultural fertility. Many
of Pompeii's neighboring communities, most famously Herculaneum,
also suffered damage or destruction during the 79 eruption, which
is thought to have lasted about 19 hours, in which time the volcano
released about 1 cubic mile (4 cubic kilometres) of ash and rock
over a wide area to the south and south-east of the crater, with
about 3 m (10 ft) of tephra falling on Pompeii. The
white ash produced by this eruption is mainly of leucite and phonolite.
Foreshocks
The 79 eruption was preceded
by a powerful earthquake seventeen years
beforehand on 5 February,
62, which caused
widespread destruction around the Bay of Naples, and particularly
to Pompeii. Some of the damage had still not been repaired when the
volcano erupted.
Another smaller earthquake took place in 64; it was recorded by
Suetonius in his biography of Nero, in De Vita
Caesarum, and by Tacitus in Book XV
of Annales
because it took place whilst Nero was in Naples performing for the
first time in a public theatre. Suetonius recorded that
the emperor continued singing through the earthquake until he had
finished his song, whilst Tacitus wrote that the theatre collapsed
shortly after being evacuated.
The Romans grew used to minor earth tremors in
the region; the writer
Pliny the
Younger writing that they "were not particularly alarming
because they are frequent in Campania". In early August of 79,
springs and wells dried up. Small earthquakes started taking place
on 20
August, 79 becoming more frequent over the next four days, but
the warnings were not recognised (it is worth noting the Romans had
no word for volcano, and only a hazy concept of other similar
mountains like Mount
Etna, home of Vulcan),
and on the afternoon of 24 August, a
catastrophic eruption of the volcano started. The eruption
devastated the region, burying Pompeii and other settlements. By
coincidence it was the day after Vulcanalia,
the festival of the Roman god of fire. a Plinian
eruption that lasted eighteen to twenty hours and produced a
rain of pumice southward of the cone that built up to depths of 2.8
meters at Pompeii, followed by a pyroclastic
flow or nuée ardente in the second, Peléan
phase that reached as far as Misenum but was
concentrated to the west and northwest. Two pyroclastic flows
engulfed Pompeii, burning and asphyxiating the stragglers who had
remained behind. Oplontis and
Herculaneum
received the brunt of the flows and were buried in fine ash and
pyroclastic deposits.
The Two Plinys
Pliny the Younger
The only surviving reliable eyewitness account of the event was recorded by Pliny the Younger, who was 17 at the time of the eruptionhttp://www.idst.vt.edu/thbecker/1124/pliny.html, in two letters to the historian Tacitus. Observing it from Misenum (across the bay, approximately 35 km from the volcano) whilst his uncle sailed closer, he saw an extraordinarily dense and rapidly-rising cloud appearing above the mountain:This was the eruption
column, now estimated to have been more than 32 km (20 miles)
tall.
After some time he described the cloud rushing
down the flanks of the mountain and covering everything around it,
including the surrounding sea. This is known today as a pyroclastic
flow, which is a cloud of superheated gas, ash, and rock that
erupts from a volcano. Geologists have
used the magnetic characteristics of over 200 volcanic rocks and
pieces of debris (e.g. roof tiles) found in Pompeii to estimate the
temperature of this pyroclastic flow. (When molten rock solidifies,
magnetic minerals in the rock record the direction of Earth's
magnetic
field. If the material is heated above a certain temperature,
known as the Curie
temperature, the rock's magnetic field may be modified or
completely reset.) Most of the materials analyzed experienced
temperatures between 240 °C and 340 °C (with a few areas showing
lower temperatures of only 180 °C). This suggests that the ash
cloud had a temperature of 850 °C when emerging from the mouth of
Vesuvius and had cooled to below 350 °C by the time it reached the
city. It is theorized that turbulence may have mixed cool air into
the ash cloud. (Cioni, et al., 2004). This is now called the
Plinian stage of the eruption, named after both the younger and
elder Plinys.
Pliny stated that several earth tremors were felt
at the time of the eruption and were followed by a very violent
shaking of the ground. He also noted that ash was falling in very
thick sheets and the village he was in had to be evacuated, and
then that the sun was blocked out by the eruption and the daylight
hours were left in darkness. Also, the sea was sucked away and
forced back by an "earthquake", a phenomenon now called a tsunami.
Pliny the Elder
Pliny’s uncle Pliny the
Elder was in command of the Roman fleet at
Misenum, and had meanwhile decided to take several ships to
investigate the phenomenon at close hand. The fleet also attempted
a rescue mission for those at the foot of the volcano when, as the
ship was preparing to leave the area, a messenger arrived from a
friend of Pliny’s living on the coast near the foot of the volcano
imploring him to rescue her. He set off across the bay but
encountered thick showers of hot cinders, lumps of pumice and
pieces of rock which, altering the shoreline and water depths,
blocked his approach to the shore and prevented him from landing
there. The prevailing southerly wind also stopped him landing
there, but he continued south under it to Stabiae (about 4.5
km from Pompeii) where he landed and took shelter with Pomponianus,
a friend. Pomponianus had already loaded a ship with possessions
and was preparing to leave, but the wind was against him.
Pliny and his party saw flames coming from
several parts of the mountain (probably pyroclastic
flows and surges,
which would later destroy Pompeii and Herculaneum). After staying
overnight, the party decided to evacuate in spite of the rain of
tephra because of the
continuing violent conditions threatening to collapse the building.
Pliny, Pomponianus and their companions made their way back towards
the beach with pillows tied to their heads to protect them from
rockfall. By this time, there was so much ash in the air that the
party could barely see through the murk and needed torches and
lanterns to find their way. They made it to the beach but found the
waters too violently disturbed from the continuous earthquakes for
them to escape safely by sea.
Pliny the Elder collapsed and died, and in the
first letter to Tacitus his nephew suggested that this was due to
the inhalation of poisonous, sulphuric gases. However, Stabiae was
16 km from the vent (roughly where the modern town of Castellammare
di Stabia is situated) and his companions were apparently
unaffected by the fumes, and so it is more likely that the
corpulent Pliny died from some other cause, such as a stroke or heart
attack. His body was found with no apparent injuries on
26
August, after the plume had dispersed sufficiently for daylight
to return.
Casualties from the eruption
Along with Pliny the Elder, the only other noble
casualties of the eruption to be known by name were Agrippa (a son
of the Jewish princess
Drusilla and the procurator Antonius
Felix) and his wife.
Estimates of the population of Pompeii range from
10,000 to 25,000, whilst Herculaneum is thought to have had a
population of about 5,000. It is not known how many people the
eruption killed, although around 1,150 remains of bodies — or casts
made of their impressions in the ash deposits — have been recovered
in and around Pompeii. The remains of about 350 bodies have been
found at Herculaneum (300 in arched vaults discovered in 1980). However these
figures must represent a great underestimation of the total number
of deaths over the region affected by the eruption.
Thirty-eight percent of the victims at Pompeii
were found in the ash fall deposits, the majority inside buildings.
These are thought to have been killed mainly by roof collapses,
with the smaller number of victims found outside of buildings
probably being killed by falling roof slates or by larger rocks
thrown out by the volcano. This differs from modern experience,
since over the last four hundred years only around 4% of victims
have been killed by ash falls during explosive eruptions. The
remaining 62% of remains found at Pompeii were in the pyroclastic
surge deposits,
Date of the eruption
The eruption of AD 79 was documented by
contemporary historians and is universally accepted as having
started on August 24th. However the archeological excavations of
Pompeii suggest that the town was buried a couple of months later.
For example, people buried in the ash appear to be wearing warmer
clothing than the light summer clothes that would be expected in
August. The fresh fruit and vegetables in the shops are typical of
October, and conversely the summer fruit that would have been
typical of August was already being sold in dried, or conserved
form. Wine fermenting jars had been sealed over, and this would
have happened around the end of October. The coins found in the
purse of a woman buried in the Ash include a commemorative coin
that should have been minted at the end of September. So far there
is no definitive theory as to why there should be such an apparent
discrepancy.
Later eruptions from the 3rd to the 19th Century
Since the eruption of 79, Vesuvius has erupted
around three dozen times. It erupted again in 203, during the
lifetime of the historian Cassius Dio.
In 472, it
ejected such a volume of ash that ashfalls were reported as far
away as Constantinople.
The eruptions of 512 were so severe that
those inhabiting the slopes of Vesuvius were granted exemption from
taxes by Theodoric
the Great, the Gothic king of Italy.
Further eruptions were recorded in 787, 968, 991, 999, 1007 and 1036 with the first
recorded lava flows. The
volcano became quiescent at the end of the 13th century
and in the following years it again became covered with gardens and
vineyards as of old. Even the inside of the crater was filled with
shrubbery.
Vesuvius entered a new and particularly
destructive phase in December 1631, when a major
eruption buried many villages under lava flows, killing around
3,000 people. Torrents of boiling water were also ejected, adding
to the devastation. Activity thereafter became almost continuous,
with relatively severe eruptions occurring in 1660, 1682, 1694, 1698, 1707, 1737, 1760, 1767, 1779, 1794, 1822, 1834, 1839, 1850, 1855, 1861, 1868, 1872, 1906, 1926, 1929, and 1944.
Eruptions in the 20th Century
The eruption of 1906 was particularly
destructive, killing over 100 people and ejecting the most lava
ever recorded from a Vesuvian eruption. Its last major eruption
as of
2007 came in March 1944, destroying the
villages of
San Sebastiano al Vesuvio, Massa di
Somma, Ottaviano, and
part of San
Giorgio a Cremano, as well as all 88 planes in a
U.S. B-25 bomber
group , as World War
II continued to rage in Italy.
From January 6, 1944 to February 23, 1944, lava
flows appeared within the rim and there were outflows. The activity
paused on February 23 and resumed on March 13. Small explosions
then occurred until the major explosion took place on March 18,
1944. The eruption could be seen from Naples and several photos
have been taken.
The volcano has been quiescent ever since. Over
the past few centuries, the quiet stages have varied from 18 months
to 7½ years, making the current lull in activity the longest in
nearly 500 years. While Vesuvius is not thought likely to erupt in
the immediate future, the danger posed by future eruptions is seen
as very high in light of the volcano's tendency towards sudden
extremely violent explosions and the very dense human population on
and around the mountain.
The future
Large plinian eruptions which emit magma in quantities of about 1 km³
or more, the most recent of which overwhelmed Pompeii, have
happened after periods of inactivity of a few thousand years.
Subplinian eruptions producing about 0.1 km³, such as those of 472
and 1631, have been more frequent with a few hundred years between
them. Following the 1631 eruption until 1944 every few years saw a
comparatively small eruption which emitted 0.001-0.01 km³ of magma.
It seems that for Vesuvius the amount of magma expelled in an
eruption increases very roughly linearly with the interval since
the previous one, and at a rate of around 0.001 km³ for each year.
This gives an extremely approximate figure of 0.06 km³ for an
eruption after 60 years of inactivity.
Magma sitting in an underground chamber for
many years will start to see higher melting point constituents such
as olivine crystallising
out. The effect is to increase the concentration of dissolved gases
(mostly steam and carbon
dioxide) in the remaining liquid magma, making the subsequent
eruption more violent. As gas-rich magma approaches the surface
during an eruption, the
huge drop in pressure
caused by the reduction in weight of the overlying rock (which
drops to zero at the surface) causes the gases to come out of
solution, the volume of gas increasing explosively from nothing to
perhaps many times that of the accompanying magma. Additionally,
the removal of the lower melting point material will raise the
concentration of felsic
components such as silicates potentially making
the magma more viscous,
adding to the explosive nature of the eruption.
The emergency plan for an eruption therefore
assumes that the worst case will be an eruption of similar size and
type to the 1631 VEI
4 one. In this scenario the slopes of the mountain, extending out
to about 7 kilometres (4.3 miles) from the vent, may be exposed to
pyroclastic flows sweeping down them, whilst much of the
surrounding area could suffer from tephra falls. Because of prevailing
winds, towns to the south and east of the volcano are most at
risk from this, and it is assumed that tephra accumulation
exceeding 100 kg/m² – at which point people are at risk from
collapsing roofs — may extend out as far as Avellino to the
east or Salerno to the
south east. Towards Naples, to the north west, this tephra fall
hazard is assumed to extend barely past the slopes of the volcano.
The specific areas actually affected by the ash cloud will depend
upon the particular circumstances surrounding the eruption.
The plan assumes between two weeks and 20 days
notice of an eruption and foresees the emergency
evacuation of 600,000 people, almost entirely comprising all
those living in the zona rossa ("red zone"), i.e. at greatest risk
from pyroclastic flows. The evacuation, by trains, ferries, cars, and buses is planned to take about seven
days, and the evacuees will mostly be sent to other parts of the
country rather than to safe areas in the local Campania region,
and may have to stay away for several months. However the dilemma
that would face those implementing the plan is when to start this
massive evacuation, since if it is left too late then many people
could be killed, whilst if it is started too early then the
precursors of the eruption may turn out to have been a false alarm.
In 1984,
40,000 people were evacuated from the Campi
Flegrei area, another volcanic complex near Naples, but no
eruption occurred.
Ongoing efforts are being made to reduce the
population living in the red zone, by demolishing illegally
constructed buildings, establishing a national park around the
upper flanks of the volcano to prevent the erection of further
buildings and by
offering financial incentives to people for moving away. The
underlying goal is to reduce the time needed to evacuate the area,
over the next 20 or 30 years, to two or three days.
The volcano is closely monitored by the Osservatorio
Vesuvio in Naples with extensive networks of seismic and
gravimetric stations, a combination of a GPS-based geodetic
array and satellite-based synthetic
aperture radar to measure ground movement, and by local
surveys
and chemical analyses of gases emitted from fumaroles. All of this is
intended to track magma rising underneath the volcano. So far, no
magma has been detected within 10 km of the surface, and so the
volcano was, in 2001, at worst only in the very early stages of
preparing for an eruption. This status has apparently not changed
much to date.
Vesuvius today
The area around Vesuvius was officially declared
a national
park on 5
June 1995.
The summit of Vesuvius is open to visitors and there is a small
network of paths around the mountain that are maintained by the
park authorities on weekends.
There is access by road to within 200 metres of
the summit (measured vertically), but thereafter access is on foot
only. There is a spiral walkway around the mountain from the road
to the crater.
References
External links
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