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Earth Observatory site page on Mt. Etna's eruption

 

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Mt. Etna eruption October 27, 2002
Mt. Etna eruption October 28, 2002
Mt. Etna eruption October 29, 2002 - another view

Images courtesy MODIS Rapid Response Team at NASA GSFC.

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October 29, 2002 - (date of web publication)

SATELLITE CAPTURES TWO-HUNDRED MILE ASH AND SMOKE PLUME FROM MT. ETNA

 

 

Mt. Etna eruption

Image 1 - Mt. Etna on October 29, 2002 - Close-up

New satellite pictures from NASA show the dark brown smoke and ash plume originating from Mt. Etna stretching for hundreds of miles over the Mediterranean Sea. The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) instrument on NASA's Terra satellite captured a spectacular true-color image of the eruption October 29, 2002. A long, grayish-brown plume of ash and smoke is streaming southward from the volcano.

Located on the island of Sicily, Etna is one of the most studied volcanoes on Earth. Just last summer, French scientists reported that Etna appeared to be undergoing a gradual shift from being a "hot spot" volcano, in which magma wells up from within the Earth, to an "island arc" volcano, in which magma is produced from the collision of tectonic plates. In keeping with that idea, this most recent eruption occurred after a series of hundreds of small earthquakes affected eastern Sicily. Unfortunately for area residents, the transition from a hot-spot volcano to a island-arc volcano signals the potential for greater danger, as the latter produces explosive, as opposed to oozing, eruptions.

 

 

Mt. Etna eruption

Image 2 - Mt. Etna on October 29, 2002 - View 2

 



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