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Volcanoes of Italy

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Location of active (red) and dormant (green) volcanoes in Italy
Location of active (red) and dormant (green) volcanoes in Italy

Italy is one of the most volcanically active countries in mainland Europe, possessing the largest volcanoes on the continent, as well as the continent's only active volcanoes.

Three main clusters of volcanism exist: a line of volcanic centres running northwest along the central part of the Italian mainland; a cluster in the northeast of Sicily; and another cluster around the Mediterranean island of Pantelleria.

The country's volcanism is due chiefly to the presence, a short distance to the south, of the boundary between the Eurasian Plate and the African Plate. The magma erupted by Italy's volcanoes is thought to result from the upward forcing of rocks melted by the subduction of one plate below another.

Active volcanoes

Three of Italy's volcanoes have erupted in the last hundred years:

Dormant volcanoes

At least nine other volcanic centres have seen eruptions in historic times, including some submarine volcanoes (seamounts). In order of most recent eruption they are:

An ambiguous eye-witness account exists which may describe an eruption in 114 BC of Monte Albano near Rome, although geological evidence does not support this claim, indicating instead that the last eruption occurred 22000 years ago.

External links

 


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