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Marsili is a large undersea volcano in the Tyrrhenian Sea, about 175 kilometers (109 mi) south of Naples. The seamount is about 3,000 m (9,800 feet) tall; its peak and crater are about 450 m below the sea surface.
Marsili is a large undersea volcano in the Tyrrhenian Sea, about 175 kilometers (109 mi) south of Naples. The seamount is about 3,000 m (9,800 feet) tall; its peak and crater are about 450 m below the sea surface.
14 Μαρ 2022 · Marsili is a large, active submarine volcano in the southeastern central Tyrrhenian Sea, located about 175 kilometers (109 mi) south of Naples. It rises about 3,000 m (9,800 feet) from the sea floor and its peak and crater reach within 450 m (1400 ft) beneath the water surface.
Off the southern coast of Italy, the largest active volcano in Europe lies hidden beneath the waves. Now scientists are mapping what would happen if it erupted.
Geological Summary. The Marsili seamount is a 50-km-long volcanic ridge in the southern Tyrrhenian Sea within a back-arc basin about 75-85 km NW of the Aeolian arc volcanoes. Near-source tephra layers obtained from a core sample were determined by Iezzi et al. (2013) to be approximately 3,000 and 5,000 years old.
The submarine volcano of Marsili is the largest and highest active volcano in the Mediterranean and in Europe, located in the central part of the oceanic basin of the same name. It has an elongated structure in the NNE-SSW direction and consists of several aligned eruptive fractures and over 80 minor eruptive centers (adventitious cones).
The Marsili is a submarine volcano located in the Tyrrhenian Sea, about 150 km southwest of the city of Naples, near the southern coast of Italy. Its name comes from the Italian geologist Luigi Ferdinando Marsili, who identified it in 1666.