Bradyseism

Bradyseism is the gradual uplift (positive bradyseism) or descent (negative bradyseism) of part of the Earth's surface caused by the filling or emptying of an underground magma chamber. It can last several years and is normally accompanied by thousands of small tremors and sometimes larger earthquakes or a volcanic eruption. The area around the Solfatara volcano near Naples is especially noted for it. The town of Pozzuoli contains three Roman marble columns which have boreholes made by marine molluscs. These occur up to 7 metres up the columns, showing how bradyseism in the area lowered the land to at least this depth under the sea and subsequently raised it again. More recently, between 1968 and 1972 the town suffered an episode of positive bradyseism and rose by 1.7 metres. There was another rise of 1.6 metres between 1982 and 1984, with a shallow (4 km deep) earthquake on October 4, 1983 which left around 30,000 people homeless.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
presidents' day
robert i, count of flanders
ragnar skancke
robert ii of flanders
albert viljam hagelin
british columbia provincial highway 19a
baldwin vii of flanders
medan
frederick catherwood
charles the good
ostland
eiichiro oda
medan, indonesia
one piece
sl
lx
kijkduin
gimle
the one piece
the grand line
the king of pirates
gasoline tax
backdoor
black friday
monkey d. luffy
deus ex: invisible war
black friday (1978)
james douglas
mount edith cavell
devil fruit
djgpp
orichalcum
red crayola
thaksin shinawatra
kennedy school of government
new york tribune
pilot (locomotive)
thai rak thai
the crash
poll
solfatara (volcano)
advance info service
shang yang
school board