CAMPI FLEGREI
'Campi Flegrei', also known as the 'Phlegraean Fields', is a large 13 km (8 mi) wide caldera situated to the west of Naples, Italy. Today most of the area lies underwater, but it includes the town of Pozzuoli and the Solfatara crater, home of the Roman god of fire, Vulcan. It is thought that the caldera was created in 2 major events. The first occurred about 40,000 years ago, erupting about 200 km³ of magma (500 km³ bulk volume[1]) to produce the Campanian Ignimbrite. At approximately 12,000 years ago another major eruption occurred forming a smaller caldera inside the main one, centered on the town of Pozzuoli. This event is known as the Neopolitan Yellow Tuff referring to the characteristic yellow rocks there.
The area was known to the Greeks, who had a colony nearby at Cumae.
The caldera, which now is essentially at ground level, is accessible on foot. It contains a large number of fumaroles, from which steam can be seen issuing, and a number of pools of boiling mud. Several subsidiary cones and tuff craters lie within the caldera. One of these craters is filled by Lago Averno. In 1538, an 8-day eruption in the area deposited enough material to create a new hill, Monte Nuovo ("new mountain").
Campi Flegrei, with Vesuvius rising in the background
| Contents |
| Trivia |
| See also |
| References |
| External links |
Trivia
Patrick Moore used to cite Campi Flegrei as an example of why the impact craters on the moon must be of volcanic origin, which was thought to be the case until the 1960s.
See also
★ Phlegra
References
★
External links
★ Phlegraean Fields
★ Volcanological Excursion to Campi Flegrei
★ Historical and Geological Introduction to the Neapolitan area
★ Story, mithos, and gastronomic ways
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